Nine Publishers, Millions of Illegal Paper Downloads | The Scientist Magazine®

lterrat's bookmarks 2017-04-12

Summary:

"Of approximately 28 million recorded SciHub downloads between September 1, 2015, and February 29, 2016, 80 percent were of papers from nine publishers, PhD student Bastian Greshake of Goethe University Frankfurt in Germany showed in a bioRxiv preprint posted last week (April 8). 'The oligopoly of publishers is . . . remarkable on the level of content consumption,' he wrote.

Altogether, SciHub illegally indexes nearly 62 million papers, according to digital object identifiers (dois), and makes them freely available to anyone. The journal ChemInform had the most papers available for download through SciHub, followed by The Lancet and Nature. (Last month, Impactstory cofounders Heather Piwowar and Jason Priem launched a similar service, called Unpaywall, a browser extension that searches for legal, freely available versions of once-paywalled papers.)

According to Greshake’s analysis of SciHub downloads (data made freely available by the site), recently published papers are among the most highly accessed through the service. Nature had the largest number of paper downloads, with more than 250,000 (exact data not given). Science came in third, closely behind the Journal of the American Chemical Society, both with between 150,000 and 200,000 papers downloaded."

Link:

http://www.the-scientist.com/?articles.view/articleNo/49177/title/Nine-Publishers--Millions-of-Illegal-Paper-Downloads/&utm_campaign=NEWSLETTER_TS_The-Scientist-Daily_2016&utm_source=hs_email&utm_medium=email&utm_content=50393312&_hsenc=p2ANqtz-_fFwGADXRgtmeiLpGKuY9ID4LlKziw21H5AAG1bxXC1mkWBkMJuvjDy1B7EvhTtkyBiV7zanwFOTw07vPo-Tu3DRAan1coSIGF-7A-4czvVOBSSnU&_hsmi=50393312

From feeds:

Open Access Tracking Project (OATP) » lterrat's bookmarks

Tags:

oa.guerrilla

Date tagged:

04/12/2017, 21:53

Date published:

04/12/2017, 17:53