Should OATP create a Facebook feed?

“The Open Access Tracking Project (OATP) publishes a daily feed of news about open access (OA). The feed is available in eight file formats to suit people with different needs or preferences: Atom, Email, Google+, HTML, JSON, Pushbullet, RSS, and Twitter.

https://cyber.harvard.edu/hoap/OATP_feeds#Versions_of_the_primary_project_feed

But OATP doesn’t have a Facebook feed. This is deliberate. I think Facebook deceives and exploits its users. I don’t want to encourage its use. On the other hand, I want OATP to reach everyone who cares about OA. It might miss a lot of OA people by refusing to create a Facebook feed….

Should OATP create a Facebook feed? Would any of you subscribe? Would any of you prefer it to the formats we already offer? ….”

OATP introduction – Harvard Open Access Project

“The Open Access Tracking Project (OATP) is a crowd-sourced project running on free and open-source software to capture news and comment on open access (OA) to research. It has two missions: (1) create real-time alerts for OA-related developments, and (2) organize knowledge of the field, by tag or subtopic, for easy searching and sharing….”

The Open Access Tracking Project (OATP) all-volunteer phase will start later this summer

“To insure that OATP serves the OA community in the future as it has in the past, we invite you to participate as a tagger, and help us recruit other taggers. OATP aims to cover OA comprehensively, and can only do that if it has taggers in every in every ecological niche — by topic, academic field, country, region, and language.”

Open Access Tools & Resources – Tinkering Librarians

“When following a conference on Twitter last week, one attendee tweeted about Unpaywall. It was the first time they had heard of it, which surprised me at first. I was equally surprised that the Open Access Button had not been mentioned at the same time.  I realize now that I have had the benefit of attending OpenCon and following many people active in Open for a while now. Below I will list some of the open tools and resources, which hopefully, someone will find useful.”

History of open access – Peter Suber

“Nobody has yet written a comprehensive history of open access (OA), and I don’t plan to. But many of my writings and projects over the years will help those who want to study or write up parts of that history. Here are some of those pieces and projects….

Analogy. Suppose a small town began to grow in a former wilderness. Early in its history it had a newspaper covering daily events. In time it had a phone book, tax roll, town hall, post office, telegraph office, public library, school, church, cemetery, train station, doctor, surveyor, and private eye, each accumulating records in its own idiosyncratic, incomplete way. None of these caches of information is a history of the town. All are materials useful for studying the history of the town. Someone who knew where a good fraction of them were located would do a service by pointing it out. In this sense, I haven’t written a history of OA. But I’ve created materials, alone or with others, useful for studying the history of OA. And here I’m pointing them out, with some notes their scope and searchability. Needless to say, the history of OA is still unfolding. The small town didn’t disappear except in the sense that it grew into a large city….”

Holiday breathers for the Open Access Tracking Project

“There may be periods during the holidays when the +OATP (@oatp) feeds are smaller than usual. But we’ll be back, and we’ll catch up on the news we didn’t tag when making merry. Have a happy and open 2018.

OATP home page 

http://bit.ly/o-a-t-p 

Consider tagging OA-related news and comment as a volunteer. Tag OA developments in general or in your areas of specialization, for example, by academic field, geographic region, language, or subtopic of OA. We’d welcome your help in making our feeds timely and comprehensive.

http://bit.ly/oatp-get-started  …”

The Open Access Tracking Project: an Intro with Peter Suber | Eventbrite

“Join ASIS&T for an introduction to the Open Access Tracking Project by Peter Suber, Director of the Harvard Open Access Project and the Harvard Office of Scholarly Communication. Suber will be presenting his Open Access Tracking project and looking for students to provide future assistance. Come hangout with other LIS students and learn about an exciting new opportunity. Light refreshments will be provided.”

How big was OA Week this year? How comprehensive is OATP?

“The Open Access Tracking Project (+OATP, @oatp) uses social tagging to generate real-time alerts to new OA-related developments — and it aims to be comprehensive. In the six months leading up to this year’s OA Week period, its primary feed published an average of 788 items per month. 

The OA Week tsunami began in September, peaked in October, and tapered off in November. In those three months to date (up to Nov 22), the same feed averaged 1,097 items per month. 

Of those 3,300 items, 376 or 11% were explicitly about OA Week itself, and tagged with oa.oa_week….”

Last night the Open Access Tracking Project passed the milestone of 50k items

“Our new milestone means that we’ve tagged 50,000 new OA developments in the past 7 years and 8 months, for an average of 26 items every day.

Is your source of OA news that comprehensive? If not, consider subscribing to our primary feed, which is available in seven formats: RSS, Atom, JSONP, Email, Twitter, Google+, and Pushbullet. If you don’t want to subscribe to anything, just bookmark the HTML edition and read it like a blog, with the most recent items at the top. (Unfortunately the Twitter and G+ feeds are abridged for technical reasons. All the others are unabridged, and the most popular unabridged version is the email version.)

https://cyber.harvard.edu/hoap/OATP_feeds#Versions_of_the_primary_project_feed

BTW, if you follow me as an individual, even in part for OA-related news, then subscribe to some version of the primary OATP feed as well. I don’t aim to be comprehensive on my personal blog and Twitter accounts. But OATP does.

To make sure that OATP covers new OA developments in your area (your field, nation, region, or language), consider becoming a tagger.

https://cyber.harvard.edu/hoap/Get_started_as_a_tagger 

…”

Last night the Open Access Tracking Project passed the milestone of 50k items

“Our new milestone means that we’ve tagged 50,000 new OA developments in the past 7 years and 8 months, for an average of 26 items every day.

Is your source of OA news that comprehensive? If not, consider subscribing to our primary feed, which is available in seven formats: RSS, Atom, JSONP, Email, Twitter, Google+, and Pushbullet. If you don’t want to subscribe to anything, just bookmark the HTML edition and read it like a blog, with the most recent items at the top. (Unfortunately the Twitter and G+ feeds are abridged for technical reasons. All the others are unabridged, and the most popular unabridged version is the email version.)

https://cyber.harvard.edu/hoap/OATP_feeds#Versions_of_the_primary_project_feed

BTW, if you follow me as an individual, even in part for OA-related news, then subscribe to some version of the primary OATP feed as well. I don’t aim to be comprehensive on my personal blog and Twitter accounts. But OATP does.

To make sure that OATP covers new OA developments in your area (your field, nation, region, or language), consider becoming a tagger.

https://cyber.harvard.edu/hoap/Get_started_as_a_tagger 

…”