I want to boycott for profit journals and only publish in non-profit ones.
What is MECFS? I assume I could look it up, but it seems likely you would welcome the chance to elucidate.
Don’t have the energy to explain right now https://en.m.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Myalgic_encephalomyelitis%2Fchronic_fatigue_syndrome&wprov=rarw1
I see.
Thank you.
Well shit, I need to call my wife. The diagnostic criteria reads like an exact list of everything she has experienced in the past two years…
It’s the most common presentation of long COVID
You could perspnally deliver physical copies to universities across the country for that money.
I don’t have the tweet so here’s my guess for 🧵 2/10.
Wth is this
Autopipette tips. Wet lab work will consume a lot of 'em.
I cannot believe the tips are that expensive.
and we wonder why the USA has a tendency toward anti-science.
Real talk, what is the real barrier to somebody creating a competing publishing firm for these things.
I’m not a scientist, but I always hear about how expensive it is to either publish or get access to scientific papers without contacting the author directly. Why does that reputation exist? Why does it seem like the scientific community is so dependent on stuff like this?
I think it is because we humans are not rational.
In a free market society, over time, every seller would charge for their service as much as they can. And the service they themselves use, will in turn charge them as much as they can.
This would be an optimal system, if only humans were rational creatures. When prices for a service increase too much, we should stop using it and go for alternatives, which would create more incentives for competition to grow and prices to come down etc.
But i think, we don’t think rationally. Sometimes, even when we know something is bad for us, we still do it cuz of lack of self control or other reasons.
Because academic institutions only award promotions to people who publish in certain journals. Disseminating knowledge is not the goal, because administrators/accrediting bodies are unable/unwilling to assess the value of intellectual contributions. They outsource this to journals which are expected to ensure that research is “legitimate”. I’d argue that they are very ineffective at this, but it still gives decision-makers an easy heuristic to use when they wanna see “number go up”.
Its mainly the prestige.
No one would care if you wrote some unknown tabloid on your resume.
Tenure-track professors typically have a time limit to prove their worthiness of tenure. At the end of that limit, they apply for tenure and either get accepted or practically fired. One way to prove your value is by publishing in “high-impact” journals. There are all sorts of methods to measure the impact of a journal objectively, such as how often its articles are cited in other articles whose impact scores are also measured. These professors that are in serious debt and have spent their entire lives aiming for this position are practically prisoners trying to get out of the whole they inadvertently dug themselves into. A lot of publications are by those professors, so they are aiming for the highest possible impact scores.
Another group is made up of highly acclaimed professors. They all know each other personally and sit on the editorial boards of those high impact journals. Before they officially submit an article, they send it to their colleague that’s on the board or knows someone on the board for review, make revisions, then submit for publication. This likely leads to a bias I like to call “a hook up”. These professors practically own the journal, so they have no reason to start a new one.
The rest of the professors (mid-level tenured professors) would be the ones likely to create a new journal that isn’t privately owned by a publishing company. Being mid-level and tenured, their only drive to excel is their personal desire to improve the field, so they’re not as driven by necessity as the tenure-track or personal drive to excel as the highly acclaimed professors. So the reason it doesn’t happen is the ones that would make it happened are over-shadowed by the ones that promote the currently established ones.
I think for a new one to come out, we’d need a schism among high-level professors or some major systemic change in academia that impacts the drive for publication.
Just publish preprints first
This, also publish subscriber only and secretly upload to sci-hub
Is there a way to specifically upload documents to scihub? Please tell me how.
Or do you mean the wosonj (or something like that) website?
While you can’t directly upload to scihub, https://libgen.li/librarian.php is an option. Eventually some from here might end up in scihub but it doesn’t matter.
edit: I knew a researcher who used to send articles (own and others downloaded through institute) directly to Alexandra over email. But that was a while ago, no idea if that still works.
Why participate in the pursuit and sharing of knowledge when you can consoom™️
Ah yes, that pursuit and sharing of knowledge known as “paying a shitload of money for the privilege of making a company that ultimately provides nothing of value some extra cash”
I didn’t know ml is cool with ultracapitalism as long as it’s under the veneer of knawlege.
Needs to start OpenArticles.com, and then you get credits for peer reviewing others work that you can use to publish your own work.
Just need to validate your identity and qualifications… Which can also be a job for someone like a peer review.
That’s not the argument the user is making, though. Unless I misunderstood you (or the screenshot)
It came across as sarcasm to me.
It’s obviously sarcasm, but people can get more upshits by pretending to not know and write a pissy comment ‘reproving’ the sarcastic comment.
The point of the OP is not that we should abandon science in the name of consumerism.
It is that for-profit entities that happen to drive scientific communication put profits above all else, including, ironically, scientific communication.
Scientists should not be expected to pay the price of a car to have their articles published, that discourages sharing important discoveries where they can be noted. And the worst part - there’s nothing causing it but greed.