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Monthly Archives: March 2014
Wellcome publish their funded Open Access articles; Elsevier are still charging extra for re-use
Robert Kiley has just published a spreadsheet of every single paper they have sponsored as paid (“Gold”) open access. http://figshare.com/articles/Wellcome_Trust_APC_spend_2012_13_data_file/963054 . This is brilliant. Every funder should do this. So off I went to see if the papers were really Open … Continue reading
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Shuttleworth Update Week 2: the "heartbeat of the project"
I am so excited to be supported by Shuttleworth – I’m still running round in circles working out where to go. The reason is that the support is massive. Not just money, but mentoring, experience, etc. And especially the heartbeats. … Continue reading
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I ask Julian Huppert and David Willetts to formally investigate Elsevier's unacceptable "Gold Open Access"
Readers of this blog will have seen many posts where I (and by proxy Mike Taylor and others) highlight the unacceptable practices of Elsevier when publishing Gold Open Access. The facts appear to be undisputed – Elsevier is mis-labelling and … Continue reading
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Elsevier are STILL mis-selling Open Access and behaving ILLEGALLY. They don't care
TWO YEARS ago Mike Taylor publicised that Elsevier were illegally charging for paid open access. Here’s his shocking analysis a few days ago The Illegality is no longer in doubt. Charles Oppenheim is highly experienced and agrees that Elsevier … Continue reading
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Segmentation of images using Kangaroo-Oriented-Computing
AMI is learning how to interpret scientific diagrams. She’s done a lot of text, and vector graphics – now she is moving to images. There’s no simple solution – we have to try a lot of different approaches. Here she … Continue reading
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Elsevier will not immediately stop charging users for CC-BY "permissions" and will not relabel mislabelled articles. I suggest academia takes legal action
I have received a reply from Alicia Wise of Elsevier to my assertion that Elsevier was asserting copyright and charging readers illegally Hi Peter, As noted in the comment thread to your blog back in August we are improving … Continue reading
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More on Elsevier's unacceptable relicensing of CC material. Can disadvantaged authors or purchasers sue?
There has been considerable twitterage this morning but silence from Elsevier… My guess so far is that thousands of authors have been seriously disadvantaged by Elsevier’s action. They may well have fallen foul of their funding body. They may be … Continue reading
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Content Mining: AMI learns her numbers
AMI is learning to extract numbers and paths from images. It’s hard work and requires a lot of heuristics. Here’s her first shot (from BMC Evolutionary Biology DOI:1471-2148-14-20- expanded: (I’ll select a phylo tree soon). At present we’re just concentrating on … Continue reading
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Elsevier are still charging THOUSANDS of pounds for CC-BY articles. IMMORAL, UNETHICAL , maybe even ILLEGAL
SEVEN MONTHS ago I showed that Elsevier “open access” CC-BY papers were incompetently labelled (see /pmr/2013/08/12/elsevier-charges-to-read-openaccess-articles/ and following blog posts), and under “Rights and Permissions” charging huge amounts of money. THEY ARE STILL DOING IT. Here’s an Open Access CC-BY … Continue reading
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I've been invited to speak at Wikimania London 2014. Huge honour and opportunity to contribute to the Digital Enlightenment
I got this wonderful message from Ed Saperia earlier this week: I am fortunate enough to be programming the featured speakers for Wikipedia’s annual conference Wikimania, which is coming to London for the first time ever. The themes of the conference … Continue reading
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