What is Sci-Hub?

https://sci-hub.41610.org


Sci-Hub is a free site to download reference papers and journal articles.

Just paste the DOI of the journal article you want, and ScienceHub will fetch 
the PDF for you for free.

Sci-Hub is the largest repository of pirated academic papers on the Internet.

Since its launch in October 2011, Sci Hub and Library Genesis have made 48 
million academic articles freely available to anyone in the world with an 
Internet connection.

Sci-Hub is commonly known as the Library of Alexandria for scientists.

https://sci-hub.41610.org/

This page will show you the latest working Sci-Hub mirrors, proxies, and cloud 
hosting providers. You'll also find information about new Sci-Hub domains and a 
list of frequently updated Sci-Hub Mirrors.

Sci-Hub is currently available at:

https://sci-hub.cc

https://sci-hub.st

https://sci-hub.do

https://sci-hub.se

https://sci-hub.41610.org/how-to-use-sci-hub


Also Note:

“Police warn students to avoid science website”

By Sean Coughlan,  BBC News family and education correspondent
Published yesterday: https://www.bbc.com/news/education-56462390

Police have warned students in the UK against using a website that they say 
lets users "illegally access" millions of scientific research papers.

The City of London police's Intellectual Property Crime Unit says using the 
Sci-Hub website could "pose a threat" to students' personal data.

The police are concerned that users of the "Russia-based website" could have 
information taken and misused online.

The Sci-Hub website says it "removes all barriers" to science.

It offers open access to more than 85 million scientific papers and claims that 
copyright laws should be abolished and that such material should be "knowledge 
to all".

It describes itself as "the first pirate website in the world to provide mass 
and public access to tens of millions of research papers".

University 'threat'
But Max Bruce, the City of London police's cyber protection officer, has urged 
universities to block the website on their networks because of the "threat 
posed by Sci-Hub to both the university and its students".

"If you're tricked into revealing your log-in credentials, whether it's through 
the use of fake emails or malware, we know that Sci-Hub will then use those 
details to compromise your university's computer network in order to steal 
research papers," he said.

The City of London Police, which is the national lead for fraud, has warned 
that students studying online at home might be vulnerable.

"Students should be aware that accessing such websites is illegal, as it hosts 
stolen intellectual property," said Det Insp Kevin Ives.

He warned that visitors to the website, whose Twitter account has been 
suspended, are "very vulnerable to having their credentials stolen".

'Access to research'

The police warning says scientific papers could have been obtained by a 
"variety of malicious means, such as the use of phishing emails to trick 
university staff and students into divulging their login credentials".

But the Sci-Hub website has previously told the BBC that it provides students 
with access to research papers for which the subscriptions are "very expensive".

Andrew Pitts, chief executive of the PSI Registry, which highlights "academic 
piracy", has warned that users "may inadvertently download potentially 
dangerous content from this illegal site and put the security of their 
organisations at risk".

The National Cyber Security Centre, part of the GCHQ intelligence service, has 
warned of the threat of cyber-attacks against universities.

Last autumn the cyber-agency warned of online attacks attempting to "derail" 
the start of the academic year in universities.

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