Investigating journals: The dark side of publishing : Nature News & Comment

pontika.nancy@gmail.com's bookmarks 2013-03-28

Summary:

"Spam e-mails changed the life of Jeffrey Beall. It was 2008, and Beall, an academic librarian and a researcher at the University of Colorado in Denver, started to notice an increasing flow of messages from new journals soliciting him to submit articles or join their editorial boards. “I immediately became fascinated because most of the e-mails contained numerous grammatical errors,” Beall says. He started browsing the journals' websites, and was soon convinced that many of the journals and their publishers were not quite what they claimed. The names often sounded grand — adjectives such as 'world', 'global' and 'international' were common — but some sites looked amateurish or gave little information about the organization behind them.Since then, Beall has become a relentless watchdog for what he describes as “potential, possible or probable predatory scholarly open-access publishers”, listing and scrutinizing them on his blog, Scholarly Open Access. Open-access publishers often collect fees from authors to pay for peer review, editing and website maintenance. Beall asserts that the goal of predatory open-access publishers is to exploit this model by charging the fee without providing all the expected publishing services. These publishers, Beall says, typically display “an intention to deceive authors and readers, and a lack of transparency in their operations and processes”."

Link:

http://www.nature.com/news/investigating-journals-the-dark-side-of-publishing-1.12666?WT.ec_id=NATURE-20130328

From feeds:

Open Access Tracking Project (OATP) » pontika.nancy@gmail.com's bookmarks

Tags:

oa.publishing oa.beall

Date tagged:

03/28/2013, 05:05

Date published:

03/28/2013, 01:05