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pentathlos.bsky.social
@pentathlos.bsky.social
Academic librarian, but expect re/posting on many different things. (We all have a past.) Professional interests: scholarly comms, library systems, and the future of libraries in higher education.
Reposted
“a restoration team from Gaza's Ministry of Religious Endowments is painstakingly retrieving historical manuscripts, rare volumes, and archival documents — some nearly 700 years old — from beneath the rubble.”
November 23, 2025 at 10:41 AM
Reposted
Oops. Ooooooooooooops.

I do hope that nobody has been given or denied a job/promotion based on their SpringerNature citation counts in the past 15 years.

arxiv.org/pdf/2511.01675

h/t @nathlarigaldie.bsky.social
November 7, 2025 at 2:02 PM
"[APCs]...... have sometimes seemed to be correlated to the established prestige or impact factor of a journal."
Now there's a mealy-mouthed statement.
This is a tiresome writeup. Yes, APCs are bad for the humanities. That's why some of us have spent over a decade working on alternative models. These are barely mentioned.
November 23, 2025 at 9:26 PM
Reposted
Anna Hatch is next, sharing a series of actions from @hhmi.org to shift academic incentives! What innovations in responsible research assessment you think can be relevant to your institutions?
November 20, 2025 at 6:37 PM
Reposted
Using DOAJ for your research?

Historical DOAJ data is now available on Zenodo (an open access research repository).

DOAJ data on Zenodo https://bit.ly/49cbDyi
##OpenData #OpenAccess
November 10, 2025 at 8:15 AM
Reposted
Open infrastructure, open data: Our role in advancing OA research – DOAJ Blog https://blog.doaj.org/2025/11/19/open-infrastructure-open-data-our-role-in-advancing-oa-research/
__Our community-driven data has long supported research into open access publishing trends. By providing open, downloadable historical datasets under CC BY licenses, we aim to promote transparency, good data practices, and meaningful contributions to scholarly communication.__ Over the years, we’ve noticed how our community uses our data to understand trends, developments and changes in the open access publishing landscape. Being able to contribute to research on scholarly communications in such a meaningful way as a resource has been valuable – but also expected – as it is in line with our core values as a community-led open infrastructure. Many of our current and past team members have also contributed to the research landscape through publications, and our expertise and insights are often being called upon. During November and December, DOAJ has a focus on data, specifically our own data! This post will give a bit of insight into the decision around this focus. **What is new?** * We have shared historical csv files to Zendo from 2003 to 2025 and given them a DOI. * We have created a Zotero group of research using DOAJ data and information. **Isn’t DOAJ data already openly available?** Our most current data can always be downloaded from our website, completely open. However, being a live database, our data is constantly changing. Those using our data for research often download their own datasets, and though many share their data as good practice, there has not been one set place to keep track of all of these datasets, and the datasets available were always just the most up to date CSV file. In line with our recent recommitment to POSI (Principles of Open Scholarly Infrastructure), sharing our historical data aligns with accountability, transparency and sustainability. We hope that by making historical data available online, we can contribute to good practice around open data, transparency and data citation. All files are of course open and shared under CC BY licenses. **How can you contribute?** There are three ways you can help us build the data and bibliographic resources we have initiated through Zenodo and Zotero, and make it easier for the community to find research using DOAJ: 1. **Contribute to the DOAJ Data Zenodo community**. If you use DOAJ Data for research, and download a new dataset through our public data dump, upload it to our Zenodo DOAJ Data Community. This means the dataset will get a DOI, which you can cite, and others can easily find the dataset(s) you’ve used, which increases transparency in research. It’s also extremely valuable to have a record of time stamped data used for research from a resource that is in constant change. We therefore highly encourage you to _not only_ use the ones we have uploaded, but to also upload your own DOAJ datasets*. _*All datasets being uploaded to the DOAJ Data community on Zenodo are checked and verified by our team, so that only DOAJ data files are included in the community._ 2. **Add publications using DOAJ data to the Zotero group**. We have started a record on Zotero with research using DOAJ – however, this is far from complete. Please help us populate this by adding research from your community to the list. This will help those working in the area find existing research, both historical and new. It also helps us keep track of how our community is using our database for research, and therefore gives us an indication of how our community wants us to adapt to developments. 3.**Get in touch**. Do you know of any good examples of researchers using our data, or perhaps you’re a keen DOAJ data user yourself? Get in touch with us, we would love to speak to researchers in our community who have used DOAJ for research. **Zenodo** is a general-purpose research repository that allows anyone to share, preserve, and discover a wide range of research outputs for free **Zotero** is a free, open-source reference management tool that helps users collect, organise, cite, and share research sources
blog.doaj.org
November 20, 2025 at 7:33 PM
Reposted
Harvard Law School Library releases first complete set of digitized Nuremberg Trials records - Harvard Law School | Harvard Law School https://hls.harvard.edu/today/harvard-law-school-library-releases-first-complete-set-of-digitized-nuremberg-trials-records/
November 20, 2025 at 11:08 PM
Reposted
Opinion: Chaos is coming for scholarly publishing.

Another one of our most-read articles over the last week.

www.researchprofessionalnews.com/rr-news-uk-v...
Chaos is coming for scholarly publishing - Research Professional News
Buckling of commercial models alongside maturing of community-led efforts promises major shifts, says Caroline Edwards
www.researchprofessionalnews.com
November 19, 2025 at 1:12 PM
Reposted
More than 1,600 people attended #OpenEd25 last month in Denver & online! Hear what some of them had to say about the experience. We just posted a wrap-up story on the event w/ key takeaways & their hopes for the future of #opened #OER. sparcopen.org/news/2025/op...
Open Education Community Keeps Eyes on the Horizon at October Conference - SPARC
sparcopen.org
November 19, 2025 at 9:25 PM
Reposted
Are you getting the most out of your funding data? Join our webinar to learn how connecting #funding information to research outputs can help you meet #openscience goals and track compliance with your policies. https://crossref.zoom.us/webinar/register/6817616658237/WN_AjrIMeLESHOdNo3s69bMNw
November 19, 2025 at 11:47 PM
Reposted
If you're using the API and constructing queries dynamically, you can pull back all the abbreviations for a suburb and adjust by year, or just add OR clauses […]
Original post on hcommons.social
hcommons.social
November 20, 2025 at 12:26 AM
Reposted
Pleased to join "Strategies for publishers to make scholarly #metadata openly available" #Munin2025

w/ Bianca Kramer @barcelonadori.bsky.social, Colleen Campbell @mpdl.mpg.de, Dominic Mitchell @doaj.bsky.social, Anne Gentil-Beccot EONR, and Mike Nason @pkp.sfu.ca

septentrio.uit.no/index.php/SC...
🚀 Munin Conference 2025 is LIVE at UiT! 🌟 Exciting discussions on making scholarly metadata openly available underway. Join the conversation! 📝📊 #Munin2025 #OpenScience #ScholarlyPublishing #Tromsø #Norway
November 18, 2025 at 6:25 PM
Reposted
RELEVANT to the two talks from @oai-ge.bsky.social we just watched as part of our Australian satellite event -
'Open Source AI: Propagation of Open Source Licenses in the Age of AI' +
'Open Science, Next Generation Metrics, and the World of Publishing'
See the recordings here oai.events
November 18, 2025 at 3:40 AM
Reposted
Hearing a lot about Oz this week? 🧙🏼‍♀️ Did you know many of the original Oz books & early media are in the public domain? Explore these classic works & how you can access them in our blog!
📖 Learn more ⬇️
blog.archive.org/2025/11/17/t...

#PublicDomain #Oz #ClassicLiterature #LFrankBaum
November 18, 2025 at 12:26 AM
Reposted
We're not as cool as Chappell Roan and the #PinkPonyClub, but the #DataRescuersClub is still pretty great. Volunteer today:
FAQ
Welcome to the Data Rescue Project! We are excited to have you join us. What is the Data Rescue Project? The Data Rescue Project is a coordinated effort among a group of data organizations, including…
www.datarescueproject.org
November 15, 2025 at 7:02 PM
Reposted
The irony here is that academics don’t just write the articles for free—we also referee and edit for them for free. Something is deeply broken.

“New Zealand's eight universities spent $30-million a year on journal licences and about half of that sum went to Elsevier.

www.rnz.co.nz/news/nationa...
Universities in 'battle of the century' with journal publisher Elsevier
One New Zealand university told its staff all universities in New Zealand and Australia would "lose some degree of access" to the publisher's 1600 titles from the start of next year.
www.rnz.co.nz
November 15, 2025 at 5:50 AM
Reposted
If you're interested in hearing more about what I've been doing during my #slvresidency, I'll be giving a talk at 1pm on 3 December in the Library's Create Quarter.
November 16, 2025 at 12:22 AM
Reposted
Oh and it's free of course, and will probably be videoed.
November 16, 2025 at 12:26 AM
Reposted
Bumper crop of submissions for FORCE 2026 to be held in Singapore 3-5 June 2026! Thank you for your support!

www.linkedin.com/posts/force1...
#force2026 #researcher #librarian #practitioner #innovator #force11 #scholarlycommunication | FORCE11
The #FORCE2026 Call for Proposals is now closed – and what a response! Over 100 submissions from 28 countries worldwide. Thank you to every #researcher, #librarian, #practitioner, and #innovator who ...
www.linkedin.com
November 15, 2025 at 9:47 AM
Reposted
JC: Two AUS universities have made their language more strict, but others made it even more vague. Universities are not motivated to correct more than they have to.
The rules are imprecise, no binding obligations, no delegation to a third-party decision maker.
Slides: osf.io/abgh2
#IRICSydney
November 16, 2025 at 10:25 PM
Reposted
Good morning from Sydney, where I will be live-posting from the International Research Integrity Conference, organized by @simongandevia.bsky.social , @jabyrnesci.bsky.social, and David Vaux.
#IRICSydney
researchintegrityconf.com/internationa...
November 16, 2025 at 9:50 PM