New file-dropping site, free, and up to 5Gb per file: YDRay.
YDRay
02 Tuesday Sep 2014
Posted in Spotted in the news
02 Tuesday Sep 2014
Posted in Spotted in the news
New file-dropping site, free, and up to 5Gb per file: YDRay.
26 Tuesday Aug 2014
Posted in Economics of Open Access, Spotted in the news
Excellent article on the success of the subscription model, and the ways it is being refined for online content.
15 Friday Aug 2014
Posted in Spotted in the news
Blinklist, a new non-fiction book summary service. I tried the timely Spillover (scientific look at the history and future trajectory of plagues), and got a clear and well structured 4,800 word summary.
The free trial lasts for three days, then it’s $5 a month for a three-month lock-in. I noted:
* You can’t use their save-to-Kindle button, except via the paid version.
* No RSS feed, to alert you to newly added books.
* A moderate amount of dubious bestseller fluff (Jared Diamond, Naomi Klein, Malcolm Gladwell, etc).
* Currently only 40 new books added per month.
* Strong in ‘the latest business buzz’ and popular science books.
* A very noticeable liberal/leftist bias in selection.
* Really ugly line breaks on the text of the website’s catalogue cards.
* No spoken-word versions of the summaries.
* No rider that similarly digests and impartially evaluates all the pertinent criticisms of the book, from the various reviews.
But it’s certainly an interesting business model, and delivers what it promises.
03 Sunday Aug 2014
Posted in Spotted in the news
Spain has legally mandated financial compensation to content owners, for online use of even snippets of content. This is an “inalienable” right and applies to every content producer, which appears to effectively void Creative Commons licenses and ‘fair use’ in Spain. Since even if you want to give something away free as Creative Commons, the law won’t allow that: you will always have the “inalienable” right to suddenly demand payment for a CC-licenced work in Spain, any time you choose. It even forbids linking to content without payment, for anything beyond a hyperlink + minimal anchor text. Given the Spanish-speaking world’s outstanding lead in publishing open access academic journals, this seems a rather perverse position for Spain to take.
09 Wednesday Jul 2014
Scholar Ninja, new from Jure Triglav…
I’ve started building a distributed search engine for scholarly literature. … What makes Scholar Ninja unique is that all of its functions (indexing, searching, and distributed server) are contained within a browser extension. [and thus hardened against censorship] “What?”, I can hear you say, “How can that be? Since when can a browser be a server?” Since 3 years ago, when the almighty WebRTC was born. … [Scholar Ninja] is completely contained within a browser extension: install it from the Chrome Web Store. … beware that this is alpha software and may break completely.
12 Thursday Jun 2014
Posted in Spotted in the news
Trooclick, a new attempt at an auto-fisker for news facts, as a browser plug-in. Silly name, and still in invitation-only alpha. But it’s an interesting indication that it might be possible to make it work, with a little human curation along the way.
12 Thursday Jun 2014
Posted in Spotted in the news
The July 2014 issue of Cites & Insights swings the bell-ropes at the Beall list and the DOAJ, and listens for interesting overlaps and more — with an aim of making…
“the clear case that publishers on Beall’s list are not typical of OA [open access] as a whole or of DOAJ”
09 Monday Jun 2014
Why we need both discoverability and long Plain English summaries (as well as short abstracts) for open academic work… “The solutions to all our problems may be buried in PDFs that nobody reads”. Admittedly, we are talking about World Bank reports, but in the ‘send a Congressman to sleep’ stakes I guess those can go head-to-head with many other academic papers.
05 Thursday Jun 2014
Posted in Spotted in the news
Fluff up your resume with an internship at Nesta in London…
05 Thursday Jun 2014
The Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) declared today that UK and European Internet users are not acting illegally when simply browsing copyrighted material online.
The equivalent of the USA’s Supreme Court established that users engaged in “Temporary acts of reproduction … which are transient or incidental” (Article 5.1 of the EU Copyright Directive) — such as files automatically copied to a Web browser’s temporary cache and displayed on screen — must not be considered to be making illegal copies. This ruling now applies throughout the UK and Europe.
Earlier this year the EU ruled that hyperlinking to public content is not illegal, and this new ruling seems like the other side of that coin.