| ▲ | observationist 4 hours ago | |
Arxiv and the internet do more for science than Elsevier. They're rent-seeking middlemen, having lost any of whatever their purpose might once have been. I think the worst part is, Elsevier could still serve a purpose and make money by curating and leveraging reputation even if all academic research was openly published and freely accessible - they could select what they consider to be the best research, have editorial content, produce visualizations and accompany content with a high quality of journalism, like Quanta. Papers being locked, researchers and institutions paying out the nose, and the other artificial scarcity / artificial stupidity features are entirely unnecessary. | ||
| ▲ | azan_ 2 hours ago | parent | next [-] | |
For some disciplines unfortunately that's not true. In medicine the publishing cartel is much stronger than arxiv. | ||
| ▲ | fakedang 4 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | |
The problem - for them - is that they wouldn't be able to make as much money as a curator than as a grifter, a middleman. As a curator or a creator, they would be actually forced to work, as compared to the current rentier model that they enjoy. Those executive bonuses don't pay for themselves you know. | ||