• @[email protected]
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    737 days ago

    As someone in science that has used this many times, I can’t emphasize enough how much this has accelerated research in the modern era. I am so grateful for her work.

    • @[email protected]
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      267 days ago

      Fr. After I graduated I was cut off from access to scientific literature, which is a major blow when trying to keep up in ones field.

    • @[email protected]
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      87 days ago

      A huge aspect of this also is that it disproportionately benefits academics and students in parts of the world where there is less institutional access to journal subscriptions. That is to say that SciHub has been a significant force for democratising knowledge and countering historic inequities.

    • Universal MonkOP
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      47 days ago

      Yep, I just found out about it recently because I was doing research on a project. I had heard, but never explored or looked into, sci-hub. I had no idea about it. I don’t know how I missed it all of these years!

        • Universal MonkOP
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          27 days ago

          Yeah, I was bummed to find out it’s no longer updated. But there are so many articles that it’s still helpful and great. And she still is holding the flame by keeping it up. I’m checking out libgen right now actually.

  • katy ✨
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    427 days ago

    articles aren’t - and cannot be - stolen; articles are meant to be read.

      • @[email protected]
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        46 days ago

        Stealing profits that are already made by stealing? Yeah, I have no sympathy for that.

        Tax payers already pay for this shit through federal funding of the sciences, just for the publishers to turn around and steal people’s time and money to view and peer review them. Publishers are thieves, so they can go fuck themselves.

        • @[email protected]
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          16 days ago

          I agree, If the research was funded by the government; then the research belongs to the people.

          Publishers and corporations is why IP laws are so fucked up beyond recognition.

  • @[email protected]
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    126 days ago

    You see, the problem, publishers, is that your “business” should not have been a business in the first place.

  • @[email protected]
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    247 days ago

    Following in Aaron Swartz’s footsteps.

    Hopefully she doesn’t get treated the way he did.

    • Universal MonkOP
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      67 days ago

      I get so pissed when I think about Aaron Swartz. He was a bit before his time. I’d love it if here were still around. There would be so much more people rallying behind him these current times.

      • @[email protected]
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        57 days ago

        I was telling a friend about him the other day. She said she found it odd how it seems like he became a martyr for his ideals, in that the way that he is remembered is almost like he’s a mythological figure, more ideal than man. I agreed with her that the loss of humanity due to such a high profile death is tragic, but that it wasn’t the internet who turned him into a martyr, but the FBI (and whoever else was pushing for his prosecution).

        They threw the book at Aaron Schwartz because they wanted to set a precedent. They wanted to turn him into a symbol, and that led to his death. I’m proud of how the internet rallied around him and made him into a different kind of symbol, but like you, I feel sad to think about what could have been if he hadn’t been killed (I know that he died by suicide, but saying that he “died” felt too passive). It sucks that he’s just a part of history now.

  • @[email protected]
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    136 days ago

    While it’s true that publishers do something of value, the amount they charge is absurd.

    What makes it even worse is that so many of the people involved are donating their labour. It reminds me of college sports in the US. The actual people doing the work, the athletes, are forced to do it for free. Meanwhile, a few select groups: coaches, TV networks, etc. are making huge amounts of money.

    • @[email protected]
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      6 days ago

      Yeah, I have no problem with people being compensated for their work.

      The problem is that the discussion usually ends at “compensation” and never includes “how much?” Useful idiots believe that whatever price is charged is always fair and necessary, which is sad.

      In a system literally built around the amount of money we have, we sure do like to believe that magnitude doesn’t matter.