• Luke@lemmy.ml
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    2 hours ago

    “People often say to me, ‘You don’t pay the authors. You don’t pay the reviewers. You hardly print anymore. The Web is free. Why do you charge?’” said H. Frederick Dylla, the former director of the American Institute of Physics and board member of the Association of American Publishers. “It sounds like a compelling argument. But it actually isn’t.”

    Albert Greco, a publishing expert at Fordham University who is working on a book about scholarly publishing, said those making that argument are forgetting everything they learned or should have learned in economics class.

    “There are costs,” he said. “Does The Washington Post have a paywall?”

    Yes.

    “So is it fair then if some high-school student wants to really follow the Supreme Court and doesn’t have the money to pay?” Greco said. “Life is a bitter mystery. We can’t give everything away for free. It’s not that kind of country.”

    These assholes don’t even have a better reason for fleecing everyone than base greed, and they don’t try to hide it.

  • Imgonnatrythis@sh.itjust.works
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    10 minutes ago

    As someone in science that has used this many times, I can’t emphasize enough how much this has accelerated research in the modern era. I am so grateful for her work.

  • meme_historian@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    6 hours ago

    “stolen” is such an exaggerated misrepresentation…news organizations should really do better. When you steal something from someone, the owner loses access to it. She just liberated public research.

    • Sylvartas@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      26 minutes ago

      Also I have met people who have published some pretty important papers, most of them use scihub on a weekly basis, and none of them care that their papers get “stolen”. And they all have some strong opinions about Elsevier.

    • Trihilis@ani.social
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      3 hours ago

      When a regular person makes something available that shouldnt be behind a paywall to begin with it’s stealing. When a billionaire or company uses ai to gather data from paid sources or just straight out plagiarises it’s just maximising profits.

    • shath [comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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      1 hour ago

      like stealing video games that you technically license if you buy, you’re not stealing anything except access which is fundamentally the only thing they can sell

  • Crotaro@beehaw.org
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    5 hours ago

    Alexandra is the hero students (and scientists) all over the world need! And I’m so glad that my former profs acknowledged and recommended Sci-Hub to us. So many people wouldn’t be able to graduate without debt (or “even more debt” for the Americans) otherwise.

  • drspod@lemmy.ml
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    4 hours ago

    Kudos for being publicly visible and not getting disappeared by the copyright mafia.

    • I'm Hiding 🇦🇺@aussie.zone
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      3 hours ago

      I wrote one of those papers. The fuckers charged me $1000 to publish it as open access, then other journals download it and stick it on their websites and charge $60 to read it. What a joke!

      • Luke@lemmy.ml
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        2 hours ago

        Ignorant person checking in with probably a dumb and oversimplified question, but what prevents you and other science researchers from posting your writing independently? Why must you submit to these corpo controlled publications?

        • ubergeek@lemmy.today
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          1 hour ago

          If you don’t get published, you don’t get cited. If you don’t get cited, it appears your work isn’t important.

          That said, every researcher I’ve emailed requesting a copy of a paper gladly supplied it, and many put them up on their uni sites.

  • Universal Monk@lemmy.dbzer0.comOP
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    6 hours ago

    I realize this is an older article from 2016. But it’s just so good, I had to share it in case some here aren’t familiar with her. Her name is Alexandra Elbakyan and she’s the person behind Sci-Hub, a library website that provides free access to millions of research papers, regardless of copyright, by bypassing publishers’ paywalls in various ways.

    And she’s my personal hero. :)

  • Allero@lemmy.today
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    5 hours ago

    Still insane to me that one woman literally saves the world of science from all this corruption

    • MalReynolds@slrpnk.net
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      4 hours ago

      Perhaps not saved, but I’d venture the most significant nail in the coffin of the scientific publishing mafia so far, pursued with integrity and honor. The rise of open publishing that followed is very telling, and in my mind directly attributable to Alexandra’s work and it’s popularity, they know they need to adapt or (probably and) die.

      Still need to work on the publish or perish mentality, getting negative results published, and getting corporate propaganda out of the mix, to name a few.