tragiccommons,

I've been reading a lot about the state of scientific publishing. Some people seem to think it's in trouble, but I see signs of health from the various innovations people are trying. Some interesting examples include the use of openreview.net to open up reviews and give credit to reviewers, and the decision by eLife to stop issuing rejections, but open up the process instead. There is an interesting critique of the eLife decision by @MarkHanson located here: https://mahansonresearch.weebly.com/blog/do-we-really-need-journals

It's a weird time for me to be working on a new journal publishing platform, but maybe it's the right time. I've always been bugged by the economics of journal publishing, and that's what got me started working on it. Maybe I should shift my focus to the social process of publishing. The death of hasn't helped, and I don't think LinkedIn and on the fediverse have filled the need yet.

SamCrawley,
@SamCrawley@sciences.social avatar

@tragiccommons I have vague ideas of a federated academic publishing model (primarily hosted by universities) on an OSS stack... but you're right there is evolution in publishing which may work better than revolution

On connecting with academics, you can also follow @academicchatter

UlrikeHahn,
@UlrikeHahn@fediscience.org avatar

@SamCrawley @tragiccommons @academicchatter there is a new group to follow (and include) for posts on new paths, ideas, developments, and tools for science digital infrastructure: @open_science

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