Fuck elsevier.
Science
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No wonder something like SciHub exists.
Ya, but it really seems like there ought to be a nonprofit organization that will peer review and publish articles.
It should be an unconditional requirement that the day your university receives a penny of public funding your papers must be public domain.
The issue isn't that no free options exist. It's that using them doesn't get you the reputation needed to be funded.
It should be an unconditional requirement that the day your university receives a penny of public funding your papers must be public domain.
Some grants do have this requirement. So publishers just charge you extra to make your article "open source".
Truly, academic publishers are vile people who make the world a worse place.
Because it's some. It's not a universal requirement.
You obviously can't just take away IP rights for academic research, but you can make all federal funding conditional on literally every academic paper written by any employee of the university being public domain. Schools can preserve their ownership by completely funding themselves, or they can recognize that most of them couldn't exist without massive federal funding and that they're not entitled to privatize the proceeds of that investment. The journals would have no capability to abuse their position because there would be no content left eligible for them to prey on.
Agree completely. Tbh I was very surprised that YOU need to pay to get published. I think it should be the other way around, as publishers should care about publishing the most quality content possible and not reaping researchers off just because they are considered 'prestigious'.
SciHub is nice (and unsurprising in this ecosystem), but there should be a legal/not copyright infringing way to provide access to scientific papers.
The infrastructure is not in place in the US to support really open access to research publications. The US should fund a national library system for this purpose. In the long term this would cost a lot less than supporting commercial publishers.