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#wolters-kluwer — Public Fediverse posts

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  1. Here's another article that made it through peer review (at #WoltersKluwer) falsely asserting that all #OpenAccess journals charge #APCs. dx.doi.org/10.1097/SAP.... (#paywalled) The article never mentions no-fee OA journals ( #DiamondOA ) or no-fee OA repositories ( #GreenOA ). #ScholComm

  2. Update. Here's another article that made it through peer review (at #WoltersKluwer) falsely asserting that all #OpenAccess journals charge #APCs.
    dx.doi.org/10.1097/SAP.0000000
    (#paywalled)

    General thesis: Paying APCs is a hardship (true) and the prices are going up (true). Therefore, to help medical students publish OA, medical schools should fund their APCs.

    The article never mentions no-fee OA journals (#DiamondOA) or no-fee OA repositories (#GreenOA).

    #ScholComm

  3. Where open access has failed to reform academic publishing, perhaps antitrust law will succeed

    The open access movement has been trying for over 20 years to promote the widest access to knowledge. Sadly, as numerous Walled Culture posts have chronicled, what should be a matter of social justice has been subverted by clever and cynical moves from the academic publishing industry in order to retain their fabulous profit margins. As a result, the open access movement has failed to deliver […]

    #AccessToKnowledge #antiTrust #damages #elsevier #embargo #ingelfingerRule #injunctiveRelief #openAccess #peerReview #sage #sharing #springerNature #taylorFrancis #wiley #woltersKluwer

    walledculture.org/where-open-a

  4. CW: Lawsuit against the mafia of academic publishers

    Maybe something comes out of this...
    --------------------
    Academic Journal Publishers Antitrust Litigation

    "On September 12, 2024, Lieff Cabraser and co-counsel at Justice Catalyst Law filed a federal antitrust lawsuit against six commercial publishers of academic journals, including Elsevier, Springer Nature, Taylor and Francis, Sage, Wiley, and Wolters Kluwer, on behalf of a proposed class of scientists and scholars who provided manuscripts or peer review, alleging that these publishers conspired to unlawfully appropriate billions of dollars that would otherwise have funded scientific research.

    As detailed in the complaint, the defendants’ alleged scheme has three main components. First, an agreement to fix the price of peer review services at zero that includes an agreement to coerce scholars into providing their labor for nothing by expressly linking their unpaid labor with their ability to get their manuscripts published in the defendants’ preeminent journals.

    Second, the publisher defendants agreed not to compete with each other for manuscripts by requiring scholars to submit their manuscripts to only one journal at a time, which substantially reduces competition by removing incentives to review manuscripts promptly and publish meritorious research quickly.

    Third, the publisher defendants agreed to prohibit scholars from freely sharing the scientific advancements described in submitted manuscripts while those manuscripts are under peer review, a process that often takes over a year. As the complaint notes, “From the moment scholars submit manuscripts for publication, the Publisher Defendants behave as though the scientific advancements set forth in the manuscripts are their property, to be shared only if the Publisher Defendant grants permission. Moreover, when the Publisher Defendants select manuscripts for publication, the Publisher Defendants will often require scholars to sign away all intellectual property rights, in exchange for nothing. The manuscripts then become the actual property of the Publisher Defendants, and the Publisher Defendants charge the maximum the market will bear for access to that scientific knowledge.”

    As the complaint notes, the three major elements of defendants’ scheme are each individually per se unlawful under Section 1 of the Sherman Act. NewScientist described aspects of the Scheme as “indefensible,” and the “most profitable business in the world,” explaining that the “reason it is so lucrative is because most of the costs of its content is picked up by taxpayers. Publicly funded researchers do the work, write it up and judge its merits. And yet the resulting intellectual property ends up in the hands of the publishers. To rub salt into the wound they then sell it via exorbitant subscriptions and paywalls, often paid for by taxpayers too.” Deutsche Bank aptly describes the Scheme as a “bizarre” “triple pay system” whereby “the state funds most of the research, pays the salaries of most of those checking the quality of the research, and then buys most of the published product.” As another observer explained, the Publishing Defendants’ Scheme “is as if the New Yorker or the Economist demanded that journalists write and edit each other’s work for free, and asked the government to foot the bill.”

    In addition, the scheme has resulted in a variety of perverse market failures that impair the ability of scientists to do their jobs and slow dramatically the pace of scientific progress. The scheme has resulted in a worsening peer-review crisis, whereby it has become increasingly difficult to coerce busy scholars into providing their valuable labor for nothing. The Scheme has held back science, delaying advances across all fields of research. It will take longer to find effective treatments for cancer. It will take longer to make advancements in material science that will support quantum computing. It will take longer to find technological tools to combat climate change.

    The lawsuit, filed in federal district court in New York, seeks treble damages and injunctive and other relief, including an order to enjoin the defendants from continuing to violate the law by requiring them to dissolve the challenged unlawful agreements."

    lieffcabraser.com/antitrust/ac

    #Elsevier #AcademicPublishers #AcademicChatter #SpringerNature #Wiley #PeerReview #Sage #WoltersKluwer

  5. 2/ Here's the legal complaint.
    lieffcabraser.com/pdf/Academic

    The plaintiff is Lucina Uddin (@lucinauddin), a professor of psychology at #UCLA.

    The six publisher defendants are #Elsevier, #Sage, #SpringerNature, #TaylorAndFrancis, #Wiley, and #WoltersKluwer. Another defendant is the #STM_Association, a publisher trade organization.

    There are also 50 individual defendants ("John Does 1 through 50”) whose names will be revealed later.

  6. European Stocks rise 1% led by #ASML's 8% surge on U.S. rule exemption. Airbus +5.2%, #Safran +1.1%, #HSBC +3%, #SchneiderElectric +3.4%, #WoltersKluwer -6%, GSK -1%. #Europe #Stocks #Airbus #HSBC #GSK

  7. Conflits d’intérêts: la Cour de cassation se fait épingler par la CEDH

    La haute juridiction a violé le droit à un procès équitable dans l’affaire #WoltersKluwer France, a jugé la Cour européenne des droits de l’homme. Des magistrats ayant des liens avec l’éditeur ne s’étaient pas déportés du dossier.

    mediapart.fr/journal/france/15

  8. In more lovely #digipres #scholcomm news...

    #Medknow was bought by #WoltersKluwer and now some 10 % of the 10.4103 #DOI's are broken, pointing to a default lww.com or journals.lww.com frontpage.

    That's without counting the minority cases which give you either a #Thieme 404, a broken OJS install or a #CLOCKSS copy through chooser.crossref.org, etc.

  9. Wer die sehr beliebte Software „Steuersparerklärung“ (https://www.steuertipps[dot]de) der Firma #Wolterskluwer einsetzt, der sollte erst mal keine Updates installieren! Auch diese Firma ist von der #Cl0P Group #gehackt worden! Ich bin gespannt, ob sich diese Firma auch mit einer Mitteilung an die Kunden zurückhält.

    #clop #cl0p #hacking #software #moveit #vulnerability #leak #angriff #russisch #datenklau #datenschutz #ITSicherheitsvorfall

  10. Après des mois de négociations de l'ensemble des #universités belges francophones face à des augmentations de prix déraisonnables, l'éditeur #WoltersKluwer a décidé de mettre fin aux contrats d'abonnement à #Jura et l'#ULiège a informé l'éditeur de l'impossibilité de renouveler son abonnement à #MonKEY. Les accès aux deux ressources seront donc interrompus dès janvier 2023. lib.uliege.be/fr/news/jura-et- #docelec #droit