A Turbulent Year in the Publishing World | The Scientist Magazine®

Amyluv's bookmarks 2017-12-17

Summary:

"This year, two major publishers, Elsevier and the American Chemical Society (ACS), won their lawsuits against Sci-Hub, a popular pirate website for academic papers. A New York district court awarded Elsevier a default legal judgement in June, ordering the site to pay $15 million in damages. In November, a judge in a Virginia district court ruled in favor of ACS, awarding it $4.8 million in damages and issuing a broad injunction that allows the society to demand that Internet service providers (ISPs), domain name registries, and search engines associated with the site censor it. Some scientists and members of the technology sector and have raised concerns about the latter request. “[This] was a very important, unprecedented, and, I think, mistaken judgement made by the court without any adversarial argument,” Peter Suber, the director of the Harvard Office for Scholarly Communication, which facilitates the university’s adoption of open-access policies, told The Scientist in November."

Link:

https://www.the-scientist.com/?articles.view/articleNo/51184/title/A-Turbulent-Year-in-the-Publishing-World/

From feeds:

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

Tags:

oa.new oa.sci-hub oa.publishing oa.preprints oa.litigation oa.elsevier oa.acs oa.societies oa.universities oa.boycotts oa.researchgate oa.publishers oa.licensing oa.springer_nature oa.wiley oa.paywalls oa.hei oa.libre oa.versions oa.guerrilla

Date tagged:

12/17/2017, 14:14

Date published:

12/17/2017, 09:14