Cabells
@cabells.com
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210 posts
Journalytics & Predatory Reports - Find trusted academic and medical publications to improve your article submissions, fulfill funding requirements, and protect against publishing fraud. Learn more at www.cabells.com
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Cabells
@cabells.com
· 1d
💥New: Who should control open access, the markets or the commons?
✍️ @thomasgraves.bsky.social reviews Publishing Beyond the Market: Open Access, Care, and the Commons (@uofmpress.bsky.social) by @samuelmoore.org
#OpenAccess #OAWeek25 #ScholComms
✍️ @thomasgraves.bsky.social reviews Publishing Beyond the Market: Open Access, Care, and the Commons (@uofmpress.bsky.social) by @samuelmoore.org
#OpenAccess #OAWeek25 #ScholComms
Who should control open access, the markets or the commons? - Impact of Social Sciences
Publishing Beyond examines the ills of a marketised system of academic publishingand outlines how commons-based approaches could be an alternative.
blogs.lse.ac.uk
Cabells
@cabells.com
· 3d
Will AI + OA be OK?
If you are anything like me, you will have been experiencing serious FOMO in the last week as colleagues and acquaintances descended on Frankfurt for the annual publishing social, interrupted intermittently by the Book Fair. From what most LinkedIn posts would have you believe, a good time was had by all, but some of that reporting may be a little OTT.
blog.cabells.com
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Cabells
@cabells.com
· 4d
AI tools tackle paper mill fraud overwhelming peer review
With more article submissions and fraudulent activity than ever before, journal peer review processes are creaking under the pressure. Nina Notman discovers how AI and automated tools are taking some…
www.chemistryworld.com
Cabells
@cabells.com
· 10d
Beer, Chips and System Failures
Whatever your political persuasion, in recent times it seems apparent that things are not quite how they should be. Things are never perfect, of course, but no matter your views, there appears to be a groundswell of opinion that things need to change. And with social media turbocharging our keyboard warrior tendencies, we also need to blame somebody for it.
blog.cabells.com
Cabells
@cabells.com
· 17d
The Most Important Number in Publishing?
Happy 50th birthday to ISSN! Yes, this week marks the half-century of ISSN International Centre, the body that manages the identifications of serial publications globally. Originally known as the International Serials Data System (ISDS), it was set up jointly by the UNESCO and France in 1975, and has been based in Paris ever since. The ISSN – or International Standard Serial Number – covers all serials (e.g., journals, newspapers, magazines) and what are known as ‘ongoing integrating resources’ (e.g., websites or databases).
blog.cabells.com
Cabells
@cabells.com
· 24d
A Little Knowledge Is a Dangerous Thing
There have been a number of studies in recent years about the awareness of predatory journals among researchers, which have had some troubling findings around perceived knowledge and actual knowledge of their activities. One study, for example, showed that while 87% of respondents to one survey said they were confident in identifying a predatory journal, only 60% could do so when tested.
blog.cabells.com
Cabells
@cabells.com
· Sep 24
When Academia Takes on Journalism… and Falls Short
This month has seen two articles published and garner significant attention on the predatory publishing phenomenon, highlighting many of the problems it creates for scholarly communications and society in general. Both articles are well argued, making interesting points and revealing core truths about predatory journals. So, what’s the problem? One of them is wrong. Not fundamentally, heinously wrong at all, but with errors that, in different ways, undermine its efforts to place a spotlight on predatory publishing practices.
blog.cabells.com
Cabells
@cabells.com
· Sep 17
Peer Review: Weak?
Now a fixture in the scholarly communications calendar, Peer Review Week has become one of those pivots that for many people, the year revolves around. Like children going back to school after the summer break, or the inexorable slowdown ahead of Christmas, this week in mid-September serves as a reflection point on what has gone before it, and what should happen afterwards.
blog.cabells.com
Cabells
@cabells.com
· Sep 10
Momentous Moment for Manchester Meet-up
Tomorrow I will have the honor of giving a lightning talk at the annual ALPSP Conference in my home city of Manchester in the UK. This is not just a highlight for me, but for those in the publishing community who are able to visit this wonderful city. As usual, there is much to delight delegates in a varied and packed agenda.
blog.cabells.com
Cabells
@cabells.com
· Sep 8
Digital Science investigation shows millions of taxpayers’ money has been awarded to researchers associated with fictitious network
Digital Science investigations show researchers associated with a fictitious research network and funding source have netted millions of taxpayers' dollars in funding.
buff.ly
Cabells
@cabells.com
· Sep 3
No Summer Break for Scholarly Communications: AI, Integrity, and Policy Updates
For those in the media, the summer months have habitually taken on a rose-tinted hue, not all ascribable to the pink-coloured wine that is so popular at this time of year. No, as the weather gets warmer and readers go on holiday to get away from all the bad news that permeates through the media most of the time, the pressure on news subsides, and it’s time to have some fun with ‘silly season’ stories instead.
blog.cabells.com