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posted by takyon on Monday November 26 2018, @02:25AM   Printer-friendly
from the marginalized dept.

Submitted via IRC for SoyCow1984

Time to break academic publishing's stranglehold on research

HERE is a trivia question for you: what is the most profitable business in the world? You might think oil, or maybe banking. You would be wrong. The answer is academic publishing. Its profit margins are vast, reportedly in the region of 40 per cent.

The reason it is so lucrative is because most of the costs of its content is picked up by taxpayers. Publicly funded researchers do the work, write it up and judge its merits. And yet the resulting intellectual property ends up in the hands of the publishers. To rub salt into the wound they then sell it via exorbitant subscriptions and paywalls, often paid for by taxpayers too.

[...] The latest attempt to break the mould is called Plan S, created by umbrella group cOAlition S. It demands that all publicly funded research be made freely available (see "An audacious new plan will make all science free. Can it work?"). When Plan S was unveiled in September, its backers expected support to snowball. But only a minority of Europe's 43 research funding bodies have signed up, and hoped-for participation from the US has failed to materialise. Meanwhile, a grass-roots campaign against it is gathering momentum.


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  • (Score: 3, Interesting) by opinionated_science on Monday November 26 2018, @12:56PM

    by opinionated_science (4031) on Monday November 26 2018, @12:56PM (#766430)

    as a panel reviewer - *this*.

    If only a single publication/year was allowed, there would be academics that published useful stuff every leap year.

    The best example of a good publication (my bias - I was impressed) was the GFP(Green Fluorescent Protein) one that led to the Nobel .

    The paper had pretty much everything need to get going with flurorescent probes.

    If any other soylentils would like to propose other "good papers" that would be nice ;-)

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