![]() ![]() And connects them for you It would be like having a crystal ball. Google "most profitable scholarly publishers" and see what companies you are led to by following links (it won't be JStor). A software that would come up with winning combinations of certain domain attributes. ![]() I'm not saying don't pirate JStor content, pirate whatever scholarly content you want as far as I'm concerned, no skin off my back.īut if you're looking for a target as the worst or the most evil or the most responsible for inequity in and high cost of access to scholarly output, you're looking in the wrong place if you're looking at JStor - I'd look at the publishers (not aggregators) and for-profit ones rather than non-profit ones. Whether or not JStor is doing enough to increase public access to scholarly content (I think nobody in the industry really is), they are doing _more_ than most of their peers in the industry, and are _far_ from the worst, the most greedy, or the most venal in the industry. Despite a lack of residual income when you earn that amount in 1 transaction in kinda makes up for the lack of residual. I was able to make around 8k in a single day selling a domain. I’ve seen it happen first hand myself selling some domains a few years back. Their prices are largely determined by those set by the actual rights holders they have to pay for the content. With Domainer Elite Pro from time to time you might have a big payday. JStor is not a publisher, so they don't have the same relationship to authors that IEEE does, it's not possible for them to do what you're talking about.Īll JStor does is get scholarly output from those who do hold the copyright or publishing rights (for which they pay these rightsholders), aggregate it on their own platform (which has a much better UI than most of their for-profit competiters), and then resell access to others.
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