Physics Societies Claim Final Victory in Court Battle Over Publishing Rights
Melville, NY (June 1, 2001) - Twelve years after first being sued
by Gordon and Breach Publishing (G&B), the American Institute of
Physics (AIP) and the American Physical Society (APS) get to have the
last word. The June issue of Physics Today Magazine carries the editorial
below, written by AIP Executive Director Marc H. Brodsky and APS Treasurer
and Publisher Thomas J. McIlrath. The editorial covers the history of
court battles in four countries about the right to publish journal pricing
information.
Defending Freedom of Speech: What have we accomplished?
The American Institute of Physics (AIP) and the American Physical
Society (APS) have historically been committed to the free and open
discussion of ideas. That commitment has been upheld by courts in Germany,
Switzerland, the US, and finally in France following 12 years of challenges
to it by Gordon and Breach Publishers (G&B). G&B's recent withdrawal
of its pending appeal in France brings the challenges to an end. The
AIP and APS passionately believe that the proper place to raise issues
that involve substantive disagreements is in public forums, not in the
courts. Although the legal battles meant tremendous costs--in both human
and financial terms--we strongly feel we did the right thing for the
right reasons. The societies can rightfully be proud of this victory.
The source of the conflict involved studies of journal costs to libraries
done by the late Heinz Barschall of the University of WisconsinMadison.
His findings were published in articles in both Physics Today (PT, published
by AIP) and the Bulletin of the American Physical Society (BAPS,
published by APS). Barschall received awards for his research from librarians
but, unfortunately, did not live to see his final vindication in the
courts. It is also unfortunate that threats of costly lawsuits have
had a chilling effect on scholarly discourse related to journal pricing.
In a December 1986 article in PT, Barschall compared the unit prices--essentially
the prices paid by US libraries per 1000 characters or equivalent--of
a small group of physics journals. In two 1988 articles, one in the
July issue of PT and the other (written with John Arrington) in the
July/August 1988 issue of BAPS, Barschall expanded his study to include
the relative cost-effectiveness of about 200 physics journals. His measure
of cost-effectiveness was the ratio of journal price per 1000 characters
to the published Science Citation Index impact factor.
G&B, which did not fare well in the comparisons, charged AIP,
APS, and Barschall with false and misleading advertising, unfair competition,
and related offenses. It also challenged Barschall's integrity and motives
in conducting his research. Despite offers by AIP and APS to provide
a public forum in their publications for both the societies and G&B
to air their views, G&B chose instead to institute court cases against
AIP and APS in Germany (1989), Switzerland (1989), France (1989), and
the US (1993). Barschall was a codefendant in several of these cases.
In every case, final decisions have now been rendered, upholding the
accuracy and truthfulness of the articles. The US court also affirmed
the freedom-of-speech rights of PT and BAPS to publish such reports.
In addition, the US court case documented an international pattern of
threatened lawsuits against those who compared G&B prices.
So what has been accomplished by the vigorous and successful defense
of our right to publish reports about the pricing of physics journals?
Clearly, we have defended our freedom of speech for articles that compare
prices and are published and distributed in the US. We have also learned
that, in foreign courts, defending the publication of such articles
has even higher burdens. Foreign laws differ from US laws, and foreign
courts often have a lower threshold for interpreting published articles
as advertising, leaving those articles unprotected by freedom of the
press per se. Advertising itself has standards of truthfulness, objectivity,
and data relevance that may vary from country to country. In all the
cases, we were found to have met the very highest of these standards,
but it was a costly (millions of dollars) and complicated legal exercise.
In a related instance, the American Mathematical Society (AMS) dropped
its defense of a G&B suit in Germany because it felt that it could
not afford the cost of defending its survey of journal pricing. Legal
costs have only increased the burden to AIP and APS while the societies
continue pricing their journals as low as possible for the widest dissemination
of information. Such is the irony when the courts are the venue chosen
to settle differences of opinion about reported data.
As the AMS and other documented situations illustrate, G&B was
successful, for a while, in squelching comments on its pricing. So,
does our successful defense mean that pricing data on journals for libraries
and publishers can now be provided, and discourse conducted in the same
venues used for other policy debates without fear of lawsuits? Let us
hope so.
However, much has happened in journal publishing over the past 12
years. One event was the sale in February of the G&B physics journals
to another publisher. But the main development has been the appearance
and use of the World Wide Web as a vehicle for journal publication and
public exchanges of opinion. The Web has led to a variety of complicated
pricing options; it is likely that a latter-day Barschall would find
it much more difficult to gather and organize pricing data. We do not
know whether pricing comparisons will become moot or will be more subject
to legal challenges. We shall see.
Both AIP and APS will continue to offer forums for discussion of issues
related to scholarly publishing. We are proud of our role in defending
the right of Barschall to publish his findings. The credit for victory
goes to several members of the leadership of both societies, and to
the societies themselves, which gave unstintingly of their time and
money to pursue challenges in courts throughout Europe and the US. During
this struggle, we have received not only consistent moral support from
members of the academic library community, but also dedicated and knowledgeable
legal support. We thank those who supported Barschall and our societies
in upholding his integrity and competence, his right to have his say,
and our right to publish his data.
Marc H. Brodsky
Executive Director
American Institute of Physics
Thomas J. McIlrath
Treasurer and Publisher
American Physical Society