Sci-Hub 'Pirate Bay For Scientists' Sued by American Chemical Society Over Cloned Site (ibtimes.co.uk)
The American Chemistry Society (ACS) is now suing Sci-Hub, the so-called "Pirate Bay for Scientists," over copyright infringement and counterfeiting, and is asking the courts to grant an injunction against the website in the US. From a report: Following the news that academic publisher Elsevier won a legal judgement of $15m in damages against Sci-Hub for allowing people to illegally download peer-reviewed academic papers for free, the world's largest scientific society ACS has filed its own lawsuit in the state of Virginia against the website. ACS is complaining that in addition to making hundreds of thousands of research papers owned by the society freely available, Sci-Hub has also cloned its website and is infringing its trademarks by operating two almost-identical replicas of the ACS website at pubs.acs.org.sci-hub.cc and acs.org.secure.sci-hub.cc.
Yeah really insightful shit man. Perhaps you could engage your brain instead of just blaming everything on the queens and the coons and the reds and the jews.
Research is typically funded via grants. Freely publishing papers does not mean that the researchers will not get paid. They already got paid well before the paper was ever published.
Closed access journals only exist to make information brokers rich. They do not fund further scientific investigation, or those who write the articles.
I still do not believe what Sci-Hub does is legitimately piracy. Piracy is downloading something you did not pay for. If my tax dollars already paid for the institutional overhead, the scientist's salary, and the grant money, downloading the paper is merely getting what I am owed. Those who monetize science are the real pirates, demanding money for access to that which was created with our tax dollars, charging universities obscene fees for the privilege of allowing their students to read it, and denying scientists and students in poorer countries access to important research.
I've had issues getting papers from the 50's thanks to this outrageous copyright business...the publishers claim to somehow be of benefit to science, and that Sci-Hub harms science, but tell me, how does that benefit science, and how does allowing me or anyone else harm it?
Copyright be damned, suing them is like suing a cop who returns stolen property because it cuts into the thief's profits. I'm a scientist, and I say long live Sci-Hub.
You're not wrong. Sci-Hub is in violation of the law, no doubt about that. Morally though, I absolutely could not care less, and think that what is really wrong is hoarding knowledge in the form of the tax payer funded publications which Sci-Hub is now making accessible for all.
I hope the Sci-Hub founder that Elsevier is after is never extradited. What she's doing is making the world a better place.
It may be meaningful. Such a judgment may make it easier to get the site delisted from US-based search engines. It may also make it easier to cut off Visa/Mastercard donations to the site and possibly stop other forms of revenues coming from US-based companies.
Also, when the leader of the Republic of Kazakhstan dies, he's 76 years old now. There will be two factions, a Russian-alignment faction and a US/NATO-alignment faction. If the US/NATO faction wins, and if US troops can be placed there before Russia invades (which won't be easy), many people in Kazakhstan will be relieved, but that that doesn't mean that the woman who created SciHub won't go to prison for the rest of her natural life.
Just take a look at what the US forced Colombia to do. 8 years of prison for sharing a single scientific article. Just imagine what punishment they would push for SciHub (which is one of the largest repositories of scientific articles in the world). Maybe 5 million years in prison? Summary execution? I don't know. But if Kazhakstan gets in bed with the US, that woman needs to drop everything she's doing and defect to Russia.
The general consensus was, whether i2p, tor, or another network, this data needs to be mirrored again, but this time it needs to be mirrored outside of a clearnet website, unable to be blocked by domain seizure, ip address blocking, or any other form of traceable legacy platform utilization.
If you agree, pick a network and start doing your part to mirror content today. Between the limited size of the networks, Windows 10 telemetry, and TrustZone/Management Engine proto-backdoors, who knows how long we will have, but now is the time to make a stand if you believe in freedom of information, limited life of copyright, and the need for society to collectively advance outside of the bounds of greed of the 'chosen few'.
Rebel today, or the freedom to rebel tomorrow will be taken from you!
Because money talks - even courts can profit from cases they process.
If builders built buildings the way programmers wrote programs, then the first woodpecker would destroy civilization.