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Twitter bans Sci-hub: Interests of the publishing mafia more important than access to science

When Twitter announced that it had suspended Donald Trump’s account, Twitter also censored the voice of Alexandra Elbakyan, the 32 year old creator of the probably most cherished website in the global scientific community: Sci-hub.

This website, as most of you will know, provides free access to paywalled scientific knowledge to anybody – both rich and poor, old or young, man or woman – regardless where on earth they live. The journal Nature listed Elbakyan among top 10 people that mattered in Science in 2016.

But such a person gets – in a world as ours – powerful enemies. For there are lots of men and women who have become richer and richer by selling articles, that scientists write for free, at highest possible prices. They have formed gangs with names as Elsevier or Wiley. Over time, a huge publishing mafia came into existence that threatens university libraries – their main victims – all over the world. For years they have chased the Sci-Hub funder from Kazakhstan, but she has been smarter than all of them.

A few days before Christmas this mafia has launched a new attack, this time with the help from an old buddy, the American Chemical Society that also opposes the idea of free access to science. And they thought: Maybe we will be luckier in a different location, India for example? Wouldn’t it be cool, if we could control the whole subcontinent, prevent the whole country from accessing Sci-Hub? And that’s what happened. The gangs field a lawsuit with the Delhi High Court, asking Indian internet service providers to block Sci-Hub and similar site Libgen.

Will the publishing mafia succeed this time? It does not seem so – although they have found a new buddy: Twitter. Right after Alexandra Elbakyan posted on Twitter about the danger of being blocked in India and lots of Indian scientists revolted against Elsevier & Co, Twitter suspended her account.

The court, though, listened to the concerns of scientists and rejected pleas for the sites to blocked immediately and instead ordered pleadings to be completed within the next six weeks.

The scientists wrote in their intervention application:

> “Unfortunately, scientific publication is controlled by an oligopoly of publishers who charge exorbitant fees and practice anti-competitive business models that seriously hamper the ability of the scientific community to access and share research.”

The Delhi Science Forum and the Society for Knowledge Commons argued that Indian law does not allow the commercialisation of and profiting from scientific knowledge which is a “public resource”.

Indian tech site Medianama also mentions a statement released on December 29 by the All India People’s Science Network (AIPSN) where they explain that this in reality is a case against all Indian research scholars:

> The case filed by the copyright holders in Delhi High Court asking for a blanket ban of the sites is not against Sci-Hub and Libgen; it is against the research scholars in this country. Most of whose research would come to a halt if this case by the robber barons of the publishing industry succeeds. It is the future of research in India that is at stake, not Alexandra Elbakyan or Sci-Hub’s future. AIPSN demands that the monopolistic model of access to knowledge be given up and the process of free access to knowledge by the public accepted.

2,000 researchers, scientists and students from across the country have signed a petition Sites as LibGen and Sci-Hub do not violate any norm of ethics or intellectual property rights, as the research papers are actually intellectual products of the authors and the institutions, they stressed:

>“Those who produce this knowledge – the authors and reviewers of research papers – are not paid, and yet these publishers make windfall profit of billions of dollars by selling subscriptions to libraries worldwide at exorbitantly inflated rates, which most institutional libraries in India, and even developed countries, cannot afford. Without a subscription, a researcher has to pay between $30 and $50 to download each paper, which most individual Indian researchers cannot afford. Instead of facilitating the flow of research information, these companies are throttling it,”

Anyway, as scholar James Heathers wrote four years ago, regardless of what anyone thinks, Sci-Hub is going to win. After he explained that academics always had to circumvent the current system he suggests to make the The Garbage Strike Test:

> Let’s say all large publishers suddenly refused anyone any access to any of their copyrighted materials at 9am tomorrow morning — what would they be replaced with?

> The answer is a system which differs in almost every respect from the status quo, and one which would start seamlessly and immediately. (…)

> My bold prediction is in about two days, the whole thing would be strongly framed as an opportunity, and various calls for assistance in sticking back together our entire library of knowledge would travel over the whole planet.

> In a fortnight, we would have quasi-formal channels of storing, disseminating, reviewing and publishing information.

> In three months, they would be established, and serious steps would be taken to make sure these channels were never corporatised or exploited ever again.

Also check this Twitter thread:

https://twitter.com/DRMacIver/status/1347630121625280512

Sci-hub’s website is still available, there are lots of mirrors, working addresses can always be found at Sci-hub’s Wikipedia page and on Reddit where also a new uncensorable Sci-Hub site is discussed.

SEE ALSO:

Why are academic articles so expensive?

"Academic publishers make Murdoch look like a socialist": A call for action

When Twitter announced that it had suspended Donald Trump's account, Twitter also censored the voice of Alexandra Elbakyan, the 32 year old creator of the probably most cherished website in the global scientific community: Sci-hub.

This website, as most of…

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New anthropology show in Arabic: "Anthropology helps us to understand who exploits us – and who we exploit"

Mai Amer: “I really hope the show encourages viewers to reflecting on and critique certain things they think”. Screenshot from her Facebook page

How can we better understand the world we live in? Not only here in Europe, but also in many Arab countries, many people don’t know what anthropology is and how it can provide them with new perspectives. What to do? In the beginning, there were blogs. Now other kind of media have become popular: podcasts, video channels and shows.

MadaMasr, my favorite Egyptian news site and magazin, interviews anthropologist Mai Amer, who has created of a new show titled Tuk Tuk (El Tok Tok in Arabic). Her aim is to make anthropological concepts more accessible for a wider Arabic speaking audience. The show is published on Facebook and produced by Al-Nahda Scientific and Cultural Association.

Three episodes are so far available: a short introduction to anthropology, discussions about the issue of women’s bodies and how culture defines the standards of femininity (including what women should or shouldn’t wear) and a episode about men’s bodies (particularly the use of Viagra and Tramadol). The next episodes will be about social media, popular religious imaginary and mahraganat – popular Egyptian dance music which is Mai Amer’s special field: She wrote her master’s thesis about Mahraganat songs.

The idea sounds brilliant. She explains in this interview:

With the Tuk Tuk through the old town of Cairo. Photo: Mondo79, flickr

> This season, I hope the show does exactly what the tuk tuk does: you get on and from your seat you watch everything going on outside in that neighborhood you don’t know, while the driver knows everyone and keeps greeting people he passes by. And you’re discovering all this from the perspective of your seat in the tuk tuk — not your car or an Uber with the windows rolled up. The tuk tuk means you’re part of the street.

I also like her definition and view about anthropology. Its role is for her to help us understand “where we stand in life: who exploits us, who we exploit, when we are performing and who we are performing to, and when other people are performing for us.” She wants us to "reflect on and critiquing certain things they think, say or do by posing questions or opening up ideas for discussion":

> We usually go through life with pre-made judgments, deeply rooted biases and values instilled by the social class in which we were raised. We’re unaware of our privileges, unaware of others’ privileges, and we’re oblivious to our prejudices and how they affect our everyday behavior.

> We don’t realize we are prisoners of ourselves and of our class. So as members of the middle class for instance, we are convinced that rich people are corrupt, the poor are kind, and those who live in the slums are criminals, and so on. We don’t stop to think how the thoughts that were planted in our subconscious so long ago affect our behavior and our whole perspective of life.

> What anthropology does is it reveals all of this to us; how such processes take place. It helps us figure out where we stand in life: who exploits us, who we exploit, when we are performing and who we are performing to, and when other people are performing for us.

In this interview with Mada Masr journalist Mostafa Mohie she also mentions other initiatives that inspired her, among others Qira2at — by Amr Khairy who publishes Arabic translations of important texts in the humanities and social sciences, and another show on Facebook called Anthropology in Arabic by by Farah Halaba.

Mai Amer is currently working on her PhD on gender in pop songs

>> read the whole interview at Mada Masr

>> visit Tuk Tuk on Facebook

PS: My Arabic is too poor to understand anything serious, so I am just referring to the Mada Masr interview here.

SEE ALSO:

Interview. Meet Dai Cooper from The Anthropology Song!

Visions of Students Today – More Digital Ethnography

Why anthropology fails to arouse interest among the public – Engaging Anthropology (2)

Nancy Scheper-Hughes: Public anthropology through collaboration with journalists

Anthropology and the challenges of sharing knowledge online: Interview with Owen Wiltshire

Keith Hart and Thomas Hylland Eriksen: This is 21st century anthropology

Mai Amer: "I really hope the show encourages viewers to reflecting on and critique certain things they think". Screenshot from her Facebook page

How can we better understand the world we live in? Not only here in Europe, but also…

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The new Anthropology Journal Ticker (beta): Get updated with recent open access journal articles!

How do you stay up to date with the most recent journal articles in anthropology? How do you navigate the growing amount of texts? How do you find something interesting? While most academics might have their own personal routine, there is as far as I know no public overview online.

The overview over Anthropology Open Access Journals is one of the most visited pages on antropologi.info. I recently updated the list and and then used it to create The Anthropology Journal Ticker. This new site displays the most recent articles from more than 80 anthropology open access journals.

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Currently it features articles from Mana, Cultural Anthropology, the Journal of Extreme Anthropology, the New Florida Journal of Anthropology, and Anuac on the front page.

Unfortunately I was not able to include all journals. The reason is that the only automated way to create such an overview works via RSS feeds. In the same way I created a few years ago The Anthropology Newspaper that displays the most recent blog posts. While all blogs publish RSS-feeds by default, this is not the case with journals. I found out that around one in three journals lack RSS feeds. But there are ways to create feeds for websites without feeds and I am exploring the options. With the Feed Creator by Fivefilters I was able to add the journals Cultural Anthropology andf Asian Ethnology to the list. RSS Bridge is another tool.

Categorizing the journals is no easy task. So far I only categorized them by language. Many journals are multilingual, though, they post articles in both English and Spanish for example. Selecting the category English will therefore also display posts in Spanish. I will have to find a better solution. As additionaly only very few journals tag their entries, I was looking for other ways to browse the content of this site. A good solution seems to be the Random Posts page. Each time you visit or refresh this page three random articles are displayed. Have a try!

Visit The Anthropology Journal Ticker at https://journals.antropologi.info

This site is work in progress. Let me know if there are journals to add and how to make the site more useful. Thanks!

Thanks to the Corona slowdown, I had time to do some work with antropologi.info – some updates behind the scenes, correcting dead links, working with the layout etc, I hope it stays like that!

SEE ALSO:

Do we (still) need journals?

screenshot

How do you stay up to date with the most recent journal articles in anthropology? How do you navigate the growing amount of texts? How do you find something interesting? While most academics might have their own personal routine,…

Read more

Egypt: Open access to online scientific journals, ebooks and encyclopedias for everybody in the whole country

It does not happen often that there a good news from Egypt where I am still living. This news here, although nearly too good to be true, is at least interesting. In January, Egypt is going to launch the Egyptian Knowledge Bank. Anybody with an Egyptian IP-address will be able to get free access to academic journals, ebooks and other publications that normally only would be available to a small circle of individuals that are affiliated with well-funded universities.

Agreements with 26 international publishing houses have already been signed. According to an official statement by the president’s media office the Egyptian Knowledge Bank project would be "the largest digital library in the world".

"Our goal is to provide all Egyptians with access to world-class publications, like Nature and Encyclopedia Britannica. By providing these materials free of charge, the knowledge bank ensures that all Egyptians, no matter what their economic circumstances, will have the tools they need to excel in their education and research", Tarek Shawki, chair of the Presidential Specialized Council for Education and Scientific Research, says.

Gaining access to research materials from private journals and other for-profit online publications has long been difficult in Egyptian academic circles, according to the news site Mada Masr. While the American University in Cairo is able to pay for online journals and databases, public universities like the University of Cairo aren’t able to do the same.

The agreement with publisher Elsevier, for example, "provides access to ScienceDirect, Elsevier’s full-text platform for research literature and abstract and citation database Scopus. They also include Elsevier’s clinical search engine ClinicalKey, and engineering reference platforms Knoveland Engineering Village. The partnership also gives Egypt’s policymakers access to SciVal, meaning they will be able assess the impact of these tools, and make informed decisions on how and where to invest in research", according Elsevier.

This state-funded initiative is an interesting variation of the open access debate. So far, the efforts have been focused on making the journals itself free to access – a nearly impossible task so far, at least regarding the more prestigious journals. The growth in open access journals, at least within anthropology – is, it seems, rather caused by the establishment of new journals like HAU, Altérités or Vibrant than established ones becoming open for anybody.

Read more about the Knowledge Bank:

Egyptian Knowledge Bank to give free access to online journals, but will it fulfill its promise? (Mada Masr, 16.11.15)

Egypt signs national agreement to expand access to scientific information (Elsevier, 17.11.15)

Dean Shawki: Egyptian Knowledge Bank to Widen Research, Education Opportunities (American University in Cairo, AUC, 11.11.15)

Al-Sisi orders establishment of ?Bank of Knowledge? (Daily News Egypt, 15.11.15)

It does not happen often that there a good news from Egypt where I am still living. This news here, although nearly too good to be true, is at least interesting. In January, Egypt is going to launch the Egyptian…

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The new antropologi.info Anthropology Newspaper and News Ticker

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Would you like to get an overview over the most recent anthropology blog posts? The old newsticker did no longer work reliably, so I’ve created a new one. It is still work in progress, but so far it seems to work well. I tried to make it look more attractive, with a newspaper look, images and short excerpts with responsive design that also looks good on mobile devices. It also provides a tagcloud from all the categories that the blog authors assigned to their posts, a probably useful tool for exploring previous posts.

The feeds are updated every two hours. Have a look at the new Anthropology Newspaper here http://www.antropologi.info/feeds/

So far, 100 70 blogs are included, so far only English and German ones. I might add more languages later. Please let me know if there are other blogs that I should add or if things are not working as expected, either here in the comment field or via the contact page.

As mentioned, I’m still working on it, there is a lot more that can be done with the current set up. It was not easy to find a good solution. I was about to go for a commercial solution but then I was so happy to find the free and opensource feed aggregator FeedWordPress by "web developer, student of Philosophy, and sometime political activist" Charles Johnson. The more I more I’ve used the more fascinated I became by this plugin. I am also very thankful for the smart template Ocomedrev that web developer Antonio Sánchez created. I only modified it slightly.

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Would you like to get an overview over the most recent anthropology blog posts? The old newsticker did no longer work reliably, so I've created a new one. It is still work in progress, but so far it seems to…

Read more