Boycott highlights AI's publishing rebellion | Science

ab1630's bookmarks 2018-05-18

Summary:

"Summary: Computer science was born of a rebellious, hacker culture, a spirit that lives on in the publishing culture of artificial intelligence (AI). The burgeoning field is increasingly turning to conference publications and free, open-review websites while shunning traditional outlets—sentiments dramatically expressed in a growing boycott of a high-profile AI journal. As of 15 May, about 3000 people, mostly academic computer scientists, had signed a petition promising not to submit, review, or edit articles for Nature Machine Intelligence (NMI), a new journal from the publisher Springer Nature set to begin publication in January 2019. The petition, signed by many prominent researchers in AI, is more than just a call for open access. It decries not only closed-access, subscription-based journals such as NMI, but also author-fee publications: open-access journals that are free to read but require researchers to pay to publish. Instead the signatories call for more "zero-cost" open-access journals."

Link:

http://science.sciencemag.org/content/360/6390/699

From feeds:

Open Access Tracking Project (OATP) » ab1630's bookmarks

Tags:

oa.new oa.paywalled oa.boycotts oa.ai oa.cs oa.gold oa.stem oa.open_science oa.springer_nature oa.petitions oa.attitudes oa.journals

Date tagged:

05/18/2018, 13:15

Date published:

05/18/2018, 09:15