May be of interest to GOAL's readers. I never thought that free (even if 
illegal) circulation of scientific knowledge poses a threat to public health. 
Interesting suggestion, I'd like to see the peer-reviewed evidence on this. 
This is particularly interesting as it is mentionned here that the pirate site 
helped increase access in "developing countries such as Iran, India and 
Indonesia where access to research is not as common". Common sense would 
suggest that increased access to scientific knowledge has a positive effect on 
public health. 

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Elsevier Cracks Down on Pirated Scientific Articles | TorrentFreak
Friday, June 12, 2015
2:06 PM
Academic publishing company Elsevier has filed a complaint at a New York 
District Court, hoping to shut down the Library Genesis project and the 
SciHub.org search engine. The sites, which are particularly popular in 
developing nations where access to academic works is relatively expensive, are 
accused of pirating millions of scientific articles.
 
With a net income of more than $1 billion Elsevier is one of the largest 
academic publishers in the world. 
Through its ScienceDirect portal the company offers access to millions of 
scientific articles spread out over 2,200 journals. 
Most large universities have licenses to allow staff and students to use 
ScienceDirect freely, but for outsiders most of the top academic publications 
are behind an expensive paywall.
In common with other content behind paywalls, there are several specialized 
sites that allow the general public to download pirated copies of these 
academic works. The Library Genesis project for example, with libgen.org and 
bookfi.org, as well as the search portal sci-hub.org.
These sites are particularly popular in developing countries such as Iran, 
India and Indonesia where access to research is not as common. However, this 
unauthorized use is not welcomed by academic publishers.
According to Elsevier the company is losing revenue because of these sites, so 
in order to stem the tide the publisher has filed a complaint (pdf) at a New 
York federal court hoping to shut them down. 
"Defendants are reproducing and distributing unauthorized copies of Elsevier's 
copyrighted materials, unlawfully obtained from ScienceDirect, through Sci-Hub 
and through various websites affiliated with the Library Genesis Project," the 
complaint reads. 
"Specifically, Defendants utilize their websites located at sci-hub.org and at 
the Libgen Domains to operate an international network of piracy and copyright 
infringement by circumventing legal and authorized means of access to the 
ScienceDirect database," it adds. 
According to Elsevier, the websites access articles by using unlawfully 
obtained student or faculty access credentials. The articles are then added to 
the "pirate" library, backed up on their own servers. 
Through the lawsuit the publisher hopes to obtain an injunction against the 
site's operators, search engines, domain registrars and hosting companies, to 
take them offline as soon as possible. 
In addition, Elsevier is requesting compensation for its losses, which could 
run into the millions.
Tom Allen, President of the Association of American Publishers (AAP), informs 
TF that websites such as Libgen pose a threat to the quality of scientific 
publications, as well as the public health.
"Scholarly publishers work to ensure the accuracy of the scientific record by 
issuing corrections and revisions to research findings as needed; Libgen 
typically does not," Allen says. 
"As a result, its repository of illegally obtained content poses a threat to 
both quality journal publishing and to public health and safety."
The court has yet to decide whether the injunctions should be granted, but 
considering outcomes in recent piracy cases there's a good chance this will 
happen. For the time being, however, the Libgen and Sci-hub websites remain 
online.

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