Springer Nature, Cambridge University Press, Thieme and ResearchGate Announce New Cooperation Agreement
Here’s the full text of a joint statement from the companies listed above.
Springer Nature, Cambridge University Press, Thieme and ResearchGate announce new cooperation to make it easier to navigate the legal sharing of academic journal articles
In a cooperation agreement announced today, three publishers and ResearchGate will work together on the sharing of articles on the scholarly collaboration platform in a way that protects the rights of authors and publishers. The agreement ultimately involves publishers who want to help and support content sharing and believe that working with ResearchGate, the largest professional network for scientists and academics, is one of the important means to achieving this.
As part of the agreement:
- ResearchGate and publishers will cooperate in educating users about their rights in relation to copyright-protected content by providing users with more and better information about how and when they may share their journal articles on the network
- ResearchGate will continue to promptly remove copyright-infringing content when alerted by publishers
- Publishers will get better visibility into the usage of new content on the platform that was originally published in their journals
This agreement is the culmination of discussions between publishers and ResearchGate announced last autumn. It shows that cooperation on the sharing of publisher content can be found and demonstrates the commitment from all parties to ensuring researchers are able to access and share high quality scholarly research responsibly.
Comment From Springer Nature And ResearchGate
Commenting, Steven Inchcoombe, Chief Publishing Officer for Springer Nature, said:
“At Springer Nature we support content sharing between researchers. We want the research we publish to be discovered, accessed, understood, used, re-used and shared, so it can be used as a springboard for new discoveries. With its 15 million users, ResearchGate is an important partner for us to help facilitate such sharing.
“We advance discovery not by working in isolation and recreating solutions found elsewhere, but by collaborating with partners, harnessing what they do best and coupling it with our best-in-class services, solutions and products. This way we are better able to meet the needs of the research community which we serve.
“Our agreement with ResearchGate will allow us to maintain the version of record and, importantly given our responsibility to our authors and customers, track and report on how our content is being used. We look forward to developing this partnership further and working together to ensure that when users share our content via ResearchGate the experience is a good one.”
Ijad Madisch, co-founder and CEO of ResearchGate, said:
“For us at ResearchGate, Open Science is about more than just sharing research. It’s about discussing this research and facilitating collaborations that drive progress. That’s why we’re excited about Springer Nature’s participation in our agreement with scientific publishers.
“A highly respected publisher, and one of the largest, Springer Nature’s journals are where many of the researchers on our network publish their work. Together with Springer Nature, we’re looking forward to providing researchers with more clarity into what can be shared on the network, as they work to advance scientific discovery.”
This development complements Springer Nature’s SharedIt service, which enables the legal sharing of subscription
Filed under: Companies (Publishers/Vendors), Journal Articles, News, Open Access, Patrons and Users, Publishing, Springer Nature
About Gary Price
Gary Price (gprice@gmail.com) is a librarian, writer, consultant, and frequent conference speaker based in the Washington D.C. metro area. He earned his MLIS degree from Wayne State University in Detroit. Price has won several awards including the SLA Innovations in Technology Award and Alumnus of the Year from the Wayne St. University Library and Information Science Program. From 2006-2009 he was Director of Online Information Services at Ask.com.