shevy-java
today at 5:07 PM
Gingras is correct - Springer here tries to censor. I believe
the only way to respond to this is by removing Springer completely.
Science can not survive when private companies such as Springer
begin to censor science, in particular old science.
> Springer Nature is nevertheless still selling the empty PDF for $39.95.
And this is also outrageous. Not only do they censor but they charge
people for that. I believe states need to build up a basic scientific
work, in particular for older papers. It can not be that private
entities control access to information here.
> Scarlata suspects Springer Nature’s internal policing software removed the paper
That's even worse. So an internal tool decides what to censor. Imagine
if all access to old articles were controlled by private greedy companies
that run auto-tools, AI, to censor stuff. We need to retaliate here in a
way to ensure open access to science perpetually.
> Representatives from Springer Nature declined to comment, beyond saying that“detailed information about specific retractions is usually confidential and can only be shared with the relevant authors.”
Max is dead, so this is a cop out. But even aside from this, it is incorrect.
Springer has a responsibility to everyone else here. If they censor something
they abused our trust. Such articles should not be held in private hands. The
whole idea of taxpayers paying for something and then Springer, Elsevier etc..
siphoning that money by their paywall, is outrageous. Now that they also censor
information, it is time to take all their privileges completely away.
Either way the Streisand effect will now kick in. Springer has become famous for
trying to cancel Planck. That injustice can not stand, no matter if automatic tools
used it or not (which also shows that these tools are buggy - shame on Springer for
employing buggy tools leading to vile censorship methods).
I don't know much about academia but it seems journals should be cooperatively edited and managed by universities rather than fully privitized. Ideally with an off ramp into public archives after a period of time.