Nature, one of the most prestigious
scientific journals in the world, has just announce plans to create a Machine
Intelligence imprint, and researchers are not happy. The field has been doing
fine with open-access journals — why clog it up with the paid-access model
everyone has been trying to escape for decades? Over two thousand have signed a
statement saying they won’t publish in it.
Academic
publishing is a tumult right now, with open-access journals and proponents
thereof battling with the old-guard prestige of the likes of Science and Nature
— along with the fees from jealous keepers such as Elsevier and Springer.
Meanwhile sites like Sci-Hub have worked to liberate the data held by paid
journals, illegally of course, and become indispensable in the process.
The
statement comes from Tom Dietterich at Oregon State
University , founding
president of the International Machine Learning Society.
“Machine
learning has been at the forefront of the movement for free and open access to
research… We see no role for closed access or author-fee publication in the
future of machine learning research and believe the adoption of this new
journal as an outlet of record for the machine learning community would be a
retrograde step,” it reads.
The
statement cites past opposition in the community to paid journals and the fact
that all the major ones in existence charge nothing as well “The following list
of researchers,” it continues, “hereby state that they will not submit to,
review, or edit for this new journal.”
There are
nearly 2,300 signatures from all over the world. Students, professors,
researchers, architects, and engineers people the list; there are
representatives of many major companies in the field: Google, Intel, Amazon,
Microsoft, IBM; many of the world’s most august learning institutions can be
found on it as well.
It’s not
that machine learning is fundamentally incompatible with paid access, Diettrich
told me in an email; rather, the field has grown to prominence so recently that
free and open-access journals have just been the better option from the start.
“Our
research community has been fortunate to develop an expectation of free and
open access to published research, but many other areas of science and
mathematics are moving in the same direction,” he wrote.
I asked if
he thought Nature’s interest manifesting in this way indicated a healthy field.
“It is a sign that Nature Publishing Group believes they can make money in this
relatively young area of research,” he answered.
But the
pledge seems like a widely supported one, he concluded: “My impression is that
we have excellent representation from all of the major research labs in
universities and companies.”
Nature may
still draw papers because of its clout, but it looks like at least a
significant number of researchers in this area will give it the cold shoulder.
Are you among their number? Feel free to add your name to the list.
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