PLoS Launches Open Access Biology Journal
Vojtek writes "An international grass-roots organization of scientists is lauching an open access journal, PLoS Biology, that will compete with existing publications. See PLoS.org for details. Read their FAQ, download and post their Poster, support their cause!" We've done several previous stories about these guys - this one is pretty thorough.
Except, where are the journals? I couldn't find either of their journals on their website. I am very interested in them however. I'm sure peices published in that journal will not be funded by large companies or groups and will probably be more theoretical, and possibly more impracticle.
http://github.com/gbook/nidb
A similar site is ArXiv, which does mostly physics stuff AFAIK. You can do things like searching more easily on the web, as well as the openness benefits.
Physics people are far ahead of other fields in this - because there is not money to be made in the field.
Chemistry journals and searchable databases are in clutches of major publishers - which solicit the free work of their referees but charge top dollars. The trouble is: the major customers are pharma companies and large universities and they can afford to pay large fees They are more interested in reliability of the online service rather than cost savings from an open project.
"In times of universal broadband deceit, telling the truth becomes a revolutionary act."
I doubt that we will ever figure out - and I suspect that even if we did figure out we couldn't do much about it
ArXiv is only a searchable database of preprints. (mathematics preprints is what I knew ArXiv for)
Basically it consists of papers before they get published.
It wasn't supposed to end up this way.
The flipside of the free accesss for readers is likely to be increased cost to authors, as people still have to be employed to find referees, make websites etc... and the money for that has to come from somewhere. I look forward to an open acess physics journal to come online. At the moment we have arxiv.org but thats not published material, its a preprint archive (and doesn't count in the ratrace).
Finding articles has begun to become a real big problem. Cheap universities cut down on subscriptions. My place of work, the University of Stockholm, canceled all science journals at the main library this year Online periodicals are still very expensive.
The problem with free online journals is getting an ISSN number for your journal. Without this, it is not even counted as a publication, and won't appear in any reference databases. To get an ISSN, the journal has to be printed and submitted to something like 50 libraries.
So, to publish an online journal you still have to kill trees...