Sci-Hub: ¿hackear la ciencia?

  1. Francisco José García Ull
Revista:
Signum (Alicante): Revista Internacional de Investigación en Eventos, Protocolo y Relaciones Institucionales

ISSN: 2951-9276

Any de publicació: 2022

Volum: 1

Número: 1

Pàgines: 11-23

Tipus: Article

Altres publicacions en: Signum (Alicante): Revista Internacional de Investigación en Eventos, Protocolo y Relaciones Institucionales

Resum

Sci-Hub website allows users to download PDF versions of scholarly articles, including many paid and restricted access documents. Sci-Hub currently has an estimated corpus of 64 million scholarly articles. In other words, it allows access to almost all international academic literature. Sci-Hub has liberalized article access data from its server logs in 2017. After processing the data, we can see that Sci-Hub provides access to an average of 400,000 valid requests per day.In this article, data mining is used to offer a detailed analysis of the use of the platform in Spain, with the aim of knowing precisely its level of use and penetration. To do this, among other indicators, the number of downloads and their regional origin are analysed, as well as the identification of academic publishers that accumulate the most downloads and their classification in different areas of knowledge.The Sci-Hub platform is framed within the open data philosophy, which seeks to make certain types of data freely available to everyone, without restrictions or control mechanisms. Therefore, this study intends to offer tools for the debate between the preservation of copyright and free access to scientific information online, which eliminates limitations in the exchange of knowledge.

Referències bibliogràfiques

  • Androcec, D. (2017). Analysis of Sci-Hub downloads of computer science papers. Acta Universitatis Sapientiae, Informatica, 9(1), 83-96.
  • Azorín, C. (2018). Intuiciones y certezas sobre los repositorios institucionales. En InnovaTics. Congreso Internacional de Innovación Tecnológica (No. 8º).
  • Bernardo, A. (23 de junio de 2017) Condena millonaria a Sci-Hub, el ‘Pirate Bay’ de la ciencia. Hipertextual. Recuperado de: https://hipertextual.com/2017/06/sci-hub-elsevier
  • Björk, B. C. (2017). Gold, green, and black open access. Learned Publishing, 30(2), 173-175
  • Bodó, Balázs, (2016) Pirates in the Library – An Inquiry into the Guerilla Open Access Movement (July 6, 2016). Paper prepared for the 8th Annual Workshop of the International Society for the History and Theory of Intellectual Property, CREATe, University of Glasgow, UK, July 6-8, 2016., Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2816925 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2816925
  • Bohannon J. (2016). Who's downloading pirated papers? Everyone. Science Magazine. Recuperado de: http://www.sciencemag.org/news/2016/04/whos-downloading-pirated-paperseveryone.
  • Cabanac, G. (2016). Bibliogifts in L ib G en? A study of a text-sharing platform driven by biblioleaks and crowdsourcing. Journal of the Association for Information Science and Technology, 67(4), 874-884.
  • Castells, M. (2001). La Galaxia Internet. Madrid: Areté
  • Davis, PM. (2017). Sci-Hub Downloads of APS Papers. The Physiologist 60: 3-9.
  • Eysenbach, G. (2006). Citation advantage of open access articles. PLoS biology, 4(5), e157.
  • Gardner, G. J., McLaughlin, S. R., & Asher, A. D. (2017). Shadow libraries and you: Sci-hub usage and the future of ill. In ACRL 2017, Baltimore, Maryland, March 22 25, 2017. [Conference paper]
  • Giles, J. (2004). Trust gives warm welcome to open access. Nature.
  • González-Solar, L., & Fernández-Marcial, V. (2019). Sci-Hub, a challenge for academic and research libraries. Profesional De La información, 28(1). https://doi.org/10.3145/epi.2019.ene.12
  • Greshake, B. (2017). Looking into Pandora's Box: The content of Sci-Hub and its usage. F1000Research, 6.
  • Himmelstein, D. S., Romero, A. R., Levernier, J. G., Munro, T. A., McLaughlin, S. R., Tzovaras, B. G., & Greene, C. S. (2018). Sci-Hub provides access to nearly all scholarly literature. eLife, 7, e32822.
  • Khabsa, M., & Giles, C. L. (2014). The number of scholarly documents on the public web. PloS one, 9(5), e93949.
  • Larivière, V., Haustein, S., & Mongeon, P. (2015). The oligopoly of academic publishers in the digital era. PloS one, 10(6), e0127502.
  • Martín, B. (3 de diciembre de 2017) La ley alcanza, pero no derrota a la Robin Hood de la ciencia. El País. Recuperado de: https://elpais.com/elpais/2017/11/29/ciencia/1511971491_929151.html
  • Melero, R. (2008). El paisaje de los repositorios institucionales open access en España. BiD textos universitaris de biblioteconomia i documentació. Universitat de Barcelona
  • Murphy K. (2016) Should all research papers be free? New York Times. Recuperado de: http://www.nytimes.com/2016/03/13/opinion/sunday/should-all-research-papers-befree.html?smid=tw-share.
  • Oppenheim, C. (2020). A copyright overview. Profesional De La información, 29(1). https://doi.org/10.3145/epi.2020.ene.06
  • Pérez, T. H., Mateos, D. R., & De la Fuente, G. B. (2007). Open Access: el papel de las bibliotecas en los repositorios institucionales de acceso abierto. En Anales de documentación (Vol. 10, pp. 185-204).
  • Rosenwald, M. S. (2016). This student put 50 million stolen research articles online. And they're free. Washington Post, March, 30.
  • Sala, H. E. (2011). Origen, consolidación, expansión e implicancias del Acceso Abierto (Open Access) en América Latina y el Caribe. Revista Educación Superior y Sociedad.
  • Suber, P. (2012). Open access overview. MIT Press. Tennant, J. P., Waldner, F., Jacques, D. C., Masuzzo, P., Collister, L. B., & Hartgerink, C. H. (2016).