September 5, 2011
"The problem is that peer-review is a privatized industry in which public interest is an externality. The public pay for raw research to be performed, but we don’t pay for the peer-review or publishing necessary to turn a it into the finished article - published research. Instead, academic journals are in the business of refining raw product and selling the result. In this case, the refined product is sold back to the research institutions who subscribe to it."

— Martin Robbins, Open science, Freedom of Information and the Big Journal Monopoly, The Lay scientist on Guardian Science, 5 September 2011.