Slashdot Mirror


Who's Downloading Pirated Scientifc Papers? Everyone (sciencemag.org)

sciencehabit quotes a report from Science Magazine: In increasing numbers, researchers around the world are turning to Sci-Hub, the controversial website that hosts 50 million pirated papers and counting. Now, with server log data from Alexandra Elbakyan, the neuroscientist who created Sci-Hub in 2011 as a 22-year-old graduate student in Kazakhstan, Science addresses some basic questions: Who are Sci-Hub's users, where are they, and what are they reading? The Sci-Hub data provide the first detailed view of what is becoming the world's de facto open-access research library. Among the revelations that may surprise both fans and foes alike: Sci-Hub users are not limited to the developing world. Some critics of Sci-Hub have complained that many users can access the same papers through their libraries but turn to Sci-Hub instead -- for convenience rather than necessity. The data provide some support for that claim. Over the 6 months leading up to March, Sci-Hub served up 28 million documents, with Iran, China, India, Russia, and the United States the leading requestors.

17 of 145 comments (clear)

  1. Isn't the idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Isn't the idea that you can pirate scientific papers sort of anti-knowledge?

    1. Re:Isn't the idea by Applehu+Akbar · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Isn't the idea that you can pirate scientific papers sort of anti-knowledge?

      No, what's anti-knowledge is the idea that research papers can be locked up behind paywalls. As a scientist, the intellectual property you worked years to create is your research itself. The paper is just a formal description of it, and that paper should be free to the world so that your peers can review it and, by building on your work, appreciate and honor your efforts.

    2. Re:Isn't the idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I think that's what they meant, that it's anti-knowledge to consider this 'piracy'. As a publishing academic, I agree, scientific papers are created to be shared so that they can be assessed, critiqued and improved by others, and to be available for contributing to the public good.

    3. Re:Isn't the idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Please, somebody downvote this moron.

      "Why would someone invest time and money in doing the research?"
      Because the results of Research are in themselves valuable. The Papers are but one result. Patents are another, and shared collaboration is a third- no need to keep on reinventing the the Tinker Toys. No Scientist has _ever_ "Done it all by themselves", they stand on the shoulders of Giants.
      The next part is something you are absolutely incapable of understanding- Fun. The Joy of discovering something New, no matter how initially trivial. And part of that fun is telling others, whether it is about a new forbidden Bandgap in doped 13C Graphene, or a different recipe for Crepes Suzette. (Try Blood Oranges, with a smidgeon of Pomegranate juice in the reduction.)

      "You are better off letting someone else do it. Scientific papers are not created to be shared, they are created to make money."
      No. Most Scientists really dislike writing Papers; they, (Or their Institutions...), certainly _don't_ get paid for it. In most cases, they _pay_to have a Paper formatted, they _pay_ to have it published, and then they _pay_ for access to the Journals. The Publishers are those who control the means and profit of publication.
      The only People who make money are the _Publishers_, you twat.
      Note that all of my papers are available for the cost of copying from the UC Preprint Service, or available online for free with an account, because UC is large and powerful enough to actually tell the Publishers to screw off.

    4. Re:Isn't the idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      >>but if all scientific papers should be released for "public good"
      >Why would someone invest time and money in doing the research? You are better off letting someone else do it.

      You seem to be of the impression that

      (1) someone else *can* do it
      (2) the only result of the research is the paper

      The first gets more true as more people are scientifically literate, but wasn't true at all 10 years ago. Depending on the niche, still that way.
      The second is worrying. The paper is a *report*. The main use of the research is the improvement in knowledge and understanding of nature by myself and my colleagues. I write the paper so it's archived, so others (strangers) can give me criticism and because I built it on top of other people's papers, so I like to give back.

      > Scientific papers are not created to be shared, they are created to make money.

      WTF? No, they aren't. I'm a scientist, take it from me, we don't create these to make money (and we don't get any money for publishing a paper). Reputation yes, peer review, ability to get criticism etc, yes. Money? No.

      (The state pays me a salary)

      > Burnie Sanders would disagree, since he is a socialist and socialists live in a dream world.

      Many countries are social democratic republics and work just fine. Those dream worlds?

    5. Re:Isn't the idea by JoeMerchant · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Scientific journals developed as ivory towers of knowledge. In the beginning, the fees they charged were somewhat justified by costs of publication and distribution, but even then it was mostly about the editorial work and peer review. If an article made it into a prestigious journal, it was assumed to have a high chance of being valid and of some importance.

      As costs of publication and distribution dropped to zero, the journals maintained their paywalls as some kind of "exclusive club" status - all their readers (who mattered to them) had access through institutional subscriptions, the subscription fees propped up the journals' (probably bloated) offices, staff, travel habits, etc. After all, there's still the editorial process to maintain, peer review to orchestrate, etc.

      It took hundreds of years for the journals to get to where they were in the late 1900s, it's not surprising that it is taking a few decades for them to come around to deal with the implications of instant free information sharing. It's just ironic that they were founded on principles of "free" exchange of information, but when the costs of exchanging information fell away it exposed how much tax they were placing on this exchange.

  2. You do the world a favor.... by Lumpy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    For every scientific paper you pirate and share. It's bullshit to keep that stuff behind paywalls.
    I also applaud everyone that finds a way to pirate college textbooks and share them.

    --
    Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    1. Re:You do the world a favor.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      No, but as a tax payer, I paid for most of those papers. I expect to see the results for any public-funded work.

    2. Re:You do the world a favor.... by Potor · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I actually write books. In my case, I earn much more from rank promotion than I do from royalties. When people pirate my books, I lose VERY little.

    3. Re:You do the world a favor.... by UnknownSoldier · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Agree 100%.

      This shenanigans of modern science having a whitepaper behind a paywall with _no ability_ to reproduce the data, let alone look at it to verify the initial analysis was correct is total bullshit and the complete antithesis of what Science is all about.

      Science was the first open source philosophy; namely to share questions, data, and results for the benefit of everyone; not sell them off to the highest bidder all in the name of greed / capitalism. This modern behavior is a complete perversion of Science, Knowledge, and Truth.

      --
      Cult, noun; a myopic belief held by a group that their "way" is the only way. Examples include stupid justice whiners, fundamental theists, fundamental atheists, pseduoskeptics such as Randi, etc.

    4. Re:You do the world a favor.... by jenningsthecat · · Score: 5, Insightful

      First of all, those in industry are not your "Colleagues". If they are getting paid 3-4x more than a PhD working for a university, then they are almost certainly worth that 3-4x increase in pay. It is called "real-world" experience for a reason. They produce more for the company they work for or they disappear unlike some professor or assistant who doesn't have experience developing real products. Don't get me wrong, we need university research, but it really doesn't pay the bills for anyone, it only sucks resources from the tax base.

      I'd mod you Troll but I already posted, so Ill take the bait instead. You say that "real products" and "real world experience" are worth money, then go on to say that the university research upon which those products are often based, (and which you admit we need), "sucks resources". If you don't see the contradiction there then your opinion isn't worth much. If you DO see the contradiction, then why did you post it? Oh yeah, I temporarily forgot - you're trolling...

      --
      'The Economy' is a giant Ponzi scheme whose most pitiable suckers are the youngest among us and the yet-unborn.
    5. Re:You do the world a favor.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      And scientific journals? The authors/researchers were paid before the paper was even submitted to the journal.

      Authors are often not paid to write the paper, they are paid to do the work. They write the paper often on unpaid time because it is of benefit to their career. Also, some of the most interesting papers are on work that was never funded, just stuff done in someone's spare time.

    6. Re:You do the world a favor.... by Sir+Holo · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Do you give your work/time away for free?

      The person who did the work/put in the time isn't going to see anything from the money that goes to a scientific journal or textbook publisher. As someone who's written a textbook, I can tell you that very few authors are paid based upon the sales of that textbook.

      And scientific journals? The authors/researchers were paid before the paper was even submitted to the journal.

      CORRECTION: We scientists (and he taxpayers that usually pay for our work) pay THREE TIMES for it. Plus, we exert effort FOR FREE to the publishers – BY LAW.

          1. Write a proposal for funding –US Federal law prohibits of using research funding for these efforts. It is on our own personal dime.
          2. Win a grant, which pays for you & your students to do the work (on the public dime)
          3. Write a manuscript to share the results with the world – US Federal Law prohibits the use of Federal funds for write-up. It is on our own personal dime.
          4. Submit it to a rapacious for-profit scientific journal – any owned by Elsevier – for review- / referee-ing.
          5. Referees are other scientists in your field, again legally required to perform the service unpaid.
          6. If accepted, Your second $$ outlay comes in the form of "page charges." Yes, you pay them to publish you work – once it's deemed important by the 'FREE' referees for the journals.
          7. The article might be printed, but is more likely to be in the form of a PDF, one that that the authors are these-days required to submit in electronic form, following stringent guidelines. The scientific authors essentially do the page-layout. Again for FREE.
          8. The publishers charge your institution tons of money for subscription to the journals, whether it is in-print, or simply a PDF

      Scientific publication charges are a huge, multi-level scam. At one time, it did cost them money to print and mail paper copies of journals. These days, they have outsourced almost every aspect of the labor required to produce a Scientific Journal Article, but somehow, mysteriously, their prices keep going up far faster than inflation.

      It is no wonder that sites like J-Stor, Research-Gate, Sci-Hub, and others are popping up all over the place.

      Personally, even though I have access to basically any journal known (at my large University), I go to Research-Gate simply because it takes 1/10th of the time to access the article I am seeking. My Uni has already paid for access, so I have a limited license to make a copy, but the big publishers make it an absolute, time-consuming pain in the ass to get a PDF of a given article. (Most of which I trash after glancing-through, as titles and abstracts are frequently inadequate.)

    7. Re:You do the world a favor.... by Lumpy · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I say WAHHH to them.

      Because you have NO RIGHT to sell your book on Algebra, that has not changed in 100's of years for $150. 95% of the content in your book is plagiarized from other sources.

      90% of all college textbooks are overpriced by 1000% and incredibly few have any real content that was added from version to version. they simply reorder chapters and "practice problems" to force students to buy a new $150 copy every year. So I support fully anyone that steals from the den of thieves that is academic publishing.

      You area hero to the world if you steal from that pit of villany.

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
  3. Hostage by Vlijmen+Fileer · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "... Downloading Pirated Scientifc [sic] Papers"??
    You mean:
    "Freeing scientific papers that were being held hostage"

  4. Google the culprit? by Obfuscant · · Score: 5, Insightful

    How much of this is because when someone googles the relevant terms it shows them Sci-Hub results and not their local restricted library? I.e., how may people are deliberately pirating papers versus being counted as pirates because that's where Google took them to?

  5. Re:sci-hub uses compromised University accounts by Applehu+Akbar · · Score: 3, Insightful

    " theft of the Universities' resources and theft of the online resource material."

    No, the thief here is the journal that grabbed the researchers' IP not only without compensation, but made them pay to do it. Plantation slaves had a better deal than that. Getting the papers to Sci-hub is the most moral way for the researcher to benefit most from his intellectual property.