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October 29, 2009, 02:00 PM ET
The Netflix of Academic Journals Opens Shop
By opening the largest online rental service for scientific, technical, and research journals, the company Deep Dyve is hoping to do for academic publications what Netflix has done for movies: make them easily accessible and inexpensive for everyone.
The Web site has been an academic-journal search engine since 2005 and unveiled its rental program this week. Now anyone can “rent” an article—which means you can view it on your computer without ownership rights or printing capabilities—for as little as 99 cents for 24 hours. Users can also subscribe for monthly passes. Currently the site has 30 million articles from various peer-reviewed journals.
William Park, chief executive of Deep Dyve, says the model will not only allow more people to read articles they might otherwise not see, but will actually encourage users to purchase more content from journals. He says that now, only about 0.2 percent of people visiting journal Web sites go on to buy articles, because they don’t know exactly what they are getting from just a title and an abstract.
“Nobody would buy a car without at least evaluating it first,” Mr. Park says. “The same is true for anything, whether it’s a dollar or $10,000.”
Mr. Park says that Deep Dyve has revenue-sharing partnerships with hundreds of publications (about 80 percent of which are scientific) and hopes to expand to more of the humanities within the coming months.


Comments
1. beckerda - October 29, 2009 at 08:37 pm
Neat
2. cgodin - November 02, 2009 at 03:44 pm
This might be useful for professionals who want to keep up, but they should really check out their academic library where subscriptions to online journals and aggregated services will allow them to do this....for "free". Yes, some libraries will charge to photocopy or scan and send an article to a patron, but if you have access to a good academic library, you won't even pay $.99 AND you can probably print it out on your own computer.
3. elwh1312 - November 06, 2009 at 03:22 pm
I agree wtih cgodin. Libraries pay hundreds of thousands of dollars a year on full text content that you can save to your desk top, export to a bibliographic citation management software of your choosing, and print out copies. And you can do this an unlimited amount of times.
Our ILL staff will even email a borrowed digital copy of an article for free to faculty desktops for saving and printing.
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