Alexandra Elbakyan, une chercheuse du Kazakhstan qui a créé un outil pour libérer les recherches scientifiques.
►http://www.lemonde.fr/festival/article/2017/07/27/alexandra-elbakyan-la-kazakhe-pirate-d-articles-scientifiques_5165479_441519
#paywall
Alexandra Elbakyan, une chercheuse du Kazakhstan qui a créé un outil pour libérer les recherches scientifiques.
►http://www.lemonde.fr/festival/article/2017/07/27/alexandra-elbakyan-la-kazakhe-pirate-d-articles-scientifiques_5165479_441519
#paywall
#Alexandra_Elbakyan #édition_scientifique #publications_scientifiques #connaissance #savoir #sci-hub
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ajouté à la métaliste sur l’éditions scientifique :
►https://seenthis.net/messages/1036396
En face, ses détracteurs, notamment américains, élargissent le débat en lui reprochant de vivre en Russie. Ils font valoir qu’elle ne désobéit pas vraiment aux lois de son pays, et sous-entendent qu’elle bénéficie en sous-main de la protection du régime de Vladimir Poutine.
#encore_poutine et #encore_la_russie !
This student put 50 million stolen research articles online. And they’re free.
▻https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/this-student-put-50-million-stolen-research-articles-online-and-theyre-free/2016/03/30/7714ffb4-eaf7-11e5-b0fd-073d5930a7b7_story.html
A spiritual successor to Aaron Swartz is angering publishers all over again
Meet accused hacker and copyright infringer Alexandra Elbakyan.
▻https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2016/04/a-spiritual-successor-to-aaron-swartz-is-angering-publishers-all-over-again/2
Global publishing giant wins $15 million damages against researcher for sharing publicly-funded knowledge | Privacy Online News
▻https://www.privateinternetaccess.com/blog/2017/06/global-publishing-giant-wins-15-million-damages-researcher-sh
The court awarded $15 million damages to the scientific publisher on the basis of 100 articles published by #Elsevier that had been made available without permission on Sci-Hub and a similar site called LibGen. At the time of writing, Sci-Hub claims to hold 62 million scientific research papers – probably a majority of all those ever published – most of which are unauthorized copies. According to a report in the scientific journal Science last year, it is Elsevier which is most affected by #Sci-Hub’s activities:
The fact that a global academic publishing company could be awarded millions in damages against someone trying to help other scientists to spread and access publicly-funded knowledge – exactly as science is supposed to work – is an indication of how broken copyright is today. Until that massive problem is fixed, Sci-Hub will remain what one leading academic called a “necessary, effective civil disobedience“.
And the link it points out in last quote. ▻http://bjoern.brembs.net/2016/02/sci-hub-as-necessary-effective-civil-disobedience
#scientific_publishing
#édition_scientifique #science #publications_scientifiques #université #droits_d'auteur
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ajouté à la métaliste sur l’éditions scientifique :
►https://seenthis.net/messages/1036396
Sci-Hub provides access to nearly all scholarly literature
The website Sci-Hub provides access to scholarly literature via full text PDF downloads. The site enables users to access articles that would otherwise be paywalled. Since its creation in 2011, Sci-Hub has grown rapidly in popularity. However, until now, the extent of Sci-Hub’s coverage was unclear. As of March 2017, we find that Sci-Hub’s database contains 68.9% of all 81.6 million scholarly articles, which rises to 85.2% for those published in closed access journals. Furthermore, Sci-Hub contains 77.0% of the 5.2 million articles published by inactive journals. Coverage varies by discipline, with 92.8% coverage of articles in chemistry journals compared to 76.3% for computer science. Coverage also varies by publisher, with the coverage of the largest publisher, Elsevier, at 97.3%. Our interactive browser at ▻https://greenelab.github.io/scihub allows users to explore these findings in more detail. Finally, we estimate that over a six-month period in 2015–2016, Sci-Hub provided access for 99.3% of valid incoming requests. Hence, the scope of this resource suggests the subscription publishing model is becoming unsustainable. For the first time, the overwhelming majority of scholarly literature is available gratis to anyone with an Internet connection.
Sci-Hub’s cache of pirated papers is so big, subscription journals are doomed, data analyst suggests
There is no doubt that Sci-Hub, the infamous—and, according to a U.S. court, illegal—online repository of pirated research papers, is enormously popular. (See Science’s investigation last year of who is downloading papers from Sci-Hub.) But just how enormous is its repository? That is the question biodata scientist Daniel Himmelstein at the University of Pennsylvania and colleagues recently set out to answer, after an assist from Sci-Hub.►http://www.sciencemag.org/news/2017/07/sci-hub-s-cache-pirated-papers-so-big-subscription-journals-are-doomed-d
A pirating service for academic journal articles could bring down the whole establishment
The subscription fees charged by academic publishers have risen so high in recent years that even wealthy American universities have said they can’t afford them. When Harvard Library reported its subscription costs had reached $3.5 million per year in a 2012 memo, for example, it said the fees were “fiscally unsustainable,” and the university asked its faculty to stop publishing research in journals that keep articles behind paywalls.
▻https://qz.com/1040668/a-pirating-service-for-academic-journal-articles-could-bring-down-the-whole-esta