Nature lets authors keep copyright
oever writes "In the latest issue of Nature, it says that the copyright for all articles published by the Nature Publishing Group will remain with the article's authors. (I guess I'll have to publish in Nature from now on.) However, to publish an article in Nature, you still have to agree on some limitations with respect to publishing the article in other media. For example, you can put a PDF on you webpage but it's not allowed to add the article to an archive (Google cache?)."
It might be me, but I see nothing of the kind in the license. What I do see however are the magic words "Ownership of Copyright remains with the authors", provided that when reproducing the contrubution the journal is acknowldged and referenced.
It is not entirely clear to me why the Authors should need to retain any "non-exclusive rights" since they are still the owners of the copyright. My guess is that they left it in from the previous version for clarity.
The restrictions on the reproduction of the original PDF and printed paper stem from the fact that the typesetting constitutes a derivative work by the Nature Publishing Group. You are however free to distribute your contribution to the paper (without nature's formatting, e.g. re-latexing it) in whatever way you please. As far as I can tell, it is completely unencumbered.
Pathman, Free (as in GPL) 3D Pac Man
What I think Nature is saying is that you retain copyright of the article, and presumably any illustrations you submitted, but Nature retains copyright of the layout and any illustations they added. This seems perfectly fair to me, provided that it does indeed mean that I could post the ASCII representation, or even my own layout, of my article to all and sundry.
There is also the "fair use" issue of photocopying articles in publications of course, but that's another point, and the restrictions there are pretty well known.
UNIX? They're not even circumcised! Savages!
I'm not sure I like the restriction, but at least I can understand why a traditional publisher or librarian might want to impose it.
The Google cache shouldn't be a problem, and Citeseer shouldn't be a problem either (it doesn't try to be archival, as far as I can tell).