Tips for spotting ‘predatory’ journals

Jeffrey Beall's bookmarks 2014-04-22

Summary:

"• Bad ones are often listed on Beall’s List of Predatory Publishers. Good ones are often on the Directory of Open Access Journals. Both are online, but neither is definitive. • Look at their websites. The predators use poor English and have shadowy contact information — often just a gmail account in a generic name like “editor@.” The editor-in-chief’s name is misspelled. • Archives are brief. These journals come and go — bad news for a researcher who hopes to leave a paper online permanently. • The website has prominent instructions about how to send money to a bank in India, China or Nigeria. • You submit an article and it passes peer review in a day. The website then falsifies the submission date to hide this. • Authors must do their own layout. • A journal lists an office in Canada and you ask to come in and meet the editors, but the answer is a firm No."

Link:

http://www.ottawacitizen.com/news/ottawa/Tips+spotting+predatory+journals/9757749/story.html

From feeds:

Open Access Tracking Project (OATP) » abernard102@gmail.com

Tags:

oa.new oa.comment oa.bealls_list oa.quality oa.credibility oa.predatory oa.publishers oa.business_models oa.gold oa.fees oa.journals

Date tagged:

04/22/2014, 15:15

Date published:

04/22/2014, 11:15