My five cent here. At 1science, we used the Beall’s list as a source of 
inspiration to built 1journal which is a white list of academic/scientific 
journal we use in building 1findr - we currently have a tad more than 87,000 
journals in there, and about 80,000 journals of which have articles indexed in 
1 journal.

While using the Beall’s list, we truly saw horror stories such as journals 
which claimed articles published in other journals. Most of the journals and 
publishers had very little activity though. Then, at the other end of the 
spectrum we had large, growing publishers. MDPI and Frontiers appeared on the 
list at one point or another. We found it a very difficult proposition to 
completely omit all the journals for publishers such as these. Some 
journals/publishers obviously had annoying behaviour such as spamming authors. 
Though that’s naughty, it isn’t predatory. At 1science, we aim to be exhaustive 
so if a company is naughty in marketing but clean in controlling articles’ 
quality, we’re willing to include it in 1findr and let the “market” punish them 
if it deems deplorable the spamming and other types of behaviour not linked 
with quality control and publisher good scholarly work.

Having produced bibliometric analyses with Scopus and WoS for years and having 
built 1findr, I see absolutely no reason to panic, though I see some real cause 
for concern. We need research funding bodies to fund a serious study of the 
issue of malpractices in publishing and it has to be neutral to business models 
- malpractices can be found at traditional subscription journals and at open 
access journals, though the APC model certainly contributed to having 
unscrupulous individuals exploit the obvious weak point of this model. Without 
a serious study, we’ll continue to be distracted by sensational journalism at a 
time when robust data is needed.

Eric Archambault
1science.com<http://1science.com>
Science-Metrix.com<http://Science-Metrix.com>
+1-514-495-6505 x111

On Jul 25, 2018, at 16:14, Reckling, Falk 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

Hi Richard,

1) A number of actions are mentioned in the response, the most important one is 
to support DOAJ, to publish publication costs via Open APC and make publishing 
contracts openly in the future.

2) There is no reliable empirical evidence that the phenomenon of predatory 
publishing has increased massively over time.

3) There is still a problem of definition: Currently all sorts of things are 
subsumed under predatory publishing. This ranges from naive, under-funded, 
unprofessional, joke to profit-seeking and fake. That was one reason why 
Beall's black list was useless, not to mention Crusaderism and missing checks 
and balances.

In short, we should observe and scientifically analyse the phenomenon, but also 
not overestimate and panic.

Best

Falk



Von: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> Im Auftrag von 
Richard Poynder
Gesendet: Mittwoch, 25. Juli 2018 15:22
An: Global Open Access List (Successor of AmSci) 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Betreff: Re: [GOAL] Predatory Publishing

Thanks for posting this Falk. I have yet to see concerted action taken anywhere 
to support researchers who become victims of predatory publishers.

I also do not think I see any recognition of their plight, or details of what 
is being planned to help them, in your document. Perhaps I missed it.

Anyway, I have blogged about the topic here:

https://poynder.blogspot.com/2018/07/falling-prey-to-predatory-oa-publisher.html

Richard Poynder

On Wed, 25 Jul 2018, 13:51 Reckling, Falk, 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
The Austrian Science Board and the FWF Respond to the Recent Media Reports on 
the Questionable Practices of Several Scholarly Publishers
https://www.fwf.ac.at/en/news-and-media-relations/news/detail/nid/20180724-2314/

___________________________________
Falk Reckling, PhD
Head of Department
Strategy - Policy, Evaluation, Analysis

FWF Austrian Science Fund
1090 Vienna, Sensengasse 1, Austria
T: +43 1 505 67 40 8861
M: +43 664 530 73 68
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
CV via ORCID https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1326-1766



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