{"id":1430,"date":"2013-09-26T13:30:53","date_gmt":"2013-09-26T20:30:53","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.michaeleisen.org\/blog\/?p=1430"},"modified":"2013-09-28T18:24:15","modified_gmt":"2013-09-29T01:24:15","slug":"nasa-paywalls-first-papers-arising-from-curiosity-rover","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.michaeleisen.org\/blog\/?p=1430","title":{"rendered":"NASA paywalls first papers arising from Curiosity rover, I am setting them free"},"content":{"rendered":"

The Mars Curiosity rover has been a huge boon for NASA – tapping into the public’s fascination with space exploration and the search for life on other planets. Its landing was watched live by millions of people, and interest in the photos and videos it is collecting is so great, that NASA has had to relocate its servers to deal with the capacity.<\/p>\n

So what does NASA do to reward this outpouring of public interest (not to mention to $2.5 billion taxpayer dollars that made it possible)? They publish the first papers<\/a> to arise from the project behind a Science magazine’s paywall:<\/p>\n

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\"curiositypaywall\"<\/a><\/p>\n

There’s really no excuse for this. The people in charge of the rover project clearly know that the public are intensely interested in everything they do and find. So I find it completely unfathomable that they would forgo this opportunity to connect the public directly to their science.\u00a0Shame on NASA.<\/p>\n

This whole situation is even more absurd, because US copyright law explicitly says that all works of the federal government – of which these surely must be included – are not subject to copyright. So, in the interests of helping NASA and Science Magazine comply with US law, I am making copies of these papers freely available here:<\/p>\n