US Court Grants ISPs and Search Engine Blockade of Sci-Hub
The American Chemical Society was granted an unprecedented injunction which requires search engines and ISPs to block Sci-Hub.
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The American Chemical Society was granted an unprecedented injunction which requires search engines and ISPs to block Sci-Hub.
NIH Data Commons Pilot Phase to seek best practices for developing and managing a data commons.
Republican-controlled Congress ordered destruction of vital sea-ice probe.
Considerations of open access models that can work across disciplines. The case of ELife, PLoS, and BioOne.
A challenge investigating reproducibility of empirical results submitted to the 2018 International Conference on Learning Representations.
Data from several lines of evidence suggest that the methodological quality of scientific experiments does not increase with increasing rank of the journal.
The planned overhaul would place new tax burdens on colleges and students, and some critics argue that it could undermine charitable giving to the institutions.
W. M. Keck Observatory chief scientist to lead investments in astronomy, chemistry, physics, materials science and mathematics research.
Researchers who want professorships are sometimes driven to publish suspect findings.
Critics say selection process for high-stakes funding programme is flawed.
Reporters and editors at the local news sites joined a union last week. On Thursday, their billionaire owner closed the sites.
Metrics are notoriously inappropriate for evaluating humanistic scholarship. HumetricsHSS is an initiative to embed metrics with humanistic values.
Emerging models of peer review from a range of disciplines and venues, and to ask how they might address some of the issues with our current systems of peer review.
Paul Shannon, Head of Technology, looks at the costs of running eLife’s own continuous publication platform four months after the launch of eLife 2.0.
Could postdoc unions be the next big thing in collective bargaining among academics? Recent filing at University of Washington could be beginning of a new round of organizing.
Rand Paul wants to add two people to every federal peer-review panel evaluating research proposals, charged with looking for value to taxpayers. Science advocates say idea would politicize federal funding of research.
It sounds almost absurd, but that could be one factor behind the so-called “reproducibility crisis”.
Academic publisher Springer Nature says it has blocked access to articles within China to comply with demands from the Chinese government.
Public Money, Public Code is a campaign of the Free Software Foundation Europe that seeks to transform that ideal into European law.
The case for “blinding” to make journal peer review fair seems less and less plausible to me for the long run. It even seems antithetical to ultimately reducing the problems it’s a bandaid solution for.
High price of journals 'placing strain on acceptance' of division of labour between researchers and publishers, says professor.
Thomas Insel's biggest lesson from his shift from NIMH director to Silicon Valley entrepreneur: academic and technology company researchers should partner up.