A Second Failed Test of ACS Articles on Request

Please see the revised post, A Third Failed Test of ACS Articles on Request and How to Help. Although the introduction, conclusions and comments section of the post below may be useful, the links and discussion around them should be disregarded. A recent post described the lack of public author-oriented documentation for the ACS Articles on Request (AoR) program. For the unfamiliar, AoR is supposed to provide free access to any article published in an ACS Publication: ... the ACS Articles on Request service allows an author's article to be accessed without restriction 12 months after web publication. ACS authors may e-mail or post the Articles on Request URL on their website in distributing up to 50 free e-prints of their final published articles to interested colleagues. Under this service, the access restriction will be lifted at 12 months, allowing free access to such articles via those same author-directed links. The author may distribute a link to the final version of the article at his or her own discretion. The link directs readers to the PDF version of the article on the ACS website. Those users who already have subscription access privileges obtain seamless IP-based access. Such access is not metered. The very existence of this program appears to not be widely known. ACS has been staunchly opposed to almost all attempts to loosen its grip on community-created content over the years, so AoR sounds like a fine idea. The only problem is it doesn't seem to work as a...
Source: Depth-First - Category: Chemists Authors: Source Type: blogs