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  • Posted by $ jbrenner 9 years, 11 months ago
    The aforementioned link starts out, "Imagine an industry where a few companies make billions of dollars by exerting strict control over valuable information -- while paying the people who produce that information nothing at all."

    It is actually worse than that. The authors have to pay $1000-2000 to get their articles published. Most faculty just charge that to their government-sponsored grants. Needless to say, this has seriously discouraged my desire to publish, given that I fund my own research since having gone Galt.

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    • Posted by Robbie53024 9 years, 11 months ago
      This looks to be a good development. In the past few years, the "scientific paper" publishers have been lax in their standards, publishing anything that they can get a couple of "peers" to review, and those peers seem to often be grad students looking to get their names on some papers to build a resume, but don't actually review or don't have sufficient background to provide proper review. Thus, we've had a rash of bogus papers published (if I remember correctly, there was even someone who did an expose where they produced "papers" with randomly selected passages from other sources and submitted them for publication, which the journals were all to eager to do).

      On the contrary to this industry disappearing, my guess is that it will transform and several new electronically based formats will emerge. They will only be as good as their review process, but I'm betting that process will be much better handled (perhaps with quality ratings for the peer reviewers for example).
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      • Posted by $ jbrenner 9 years, 11 months ago
        Generally, the standards for the open source journals is somewhat lower than for those run by the scientific publishers. The review process is done all electronically now. Each reviewer gets a .pdf of the article. I review four to six articles per year and used to serve as an associate editor a few years ago for a little while.
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