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Current Bioinformatics is a peer-reviewed open access scientific journal, published by Bentham Science Publishers, covering areas such as such as computing in biomedicine and genomics, computational proteomics and systems biology, and metabolic pathway engineering.
[1] [2] [3] This fee may be paid by the author, the author's institution, or their research funder. [4] Sometimes, publication fees are also involved in traditional journals or for paywalled content. [5] Some publishers waive the fee in cases of hardship or geographic location, but this is not a widespread practice. [6]
In 2008, Carl Malamud published title 24 of the CCR, the California Building Standards Code, on Public.Resource.Org for free, even though the OAL claims publishing regulations with the force of law without relevant permissions is unlawful. [2] In March 2012, Malamud published the rest of the CCR on law.resource.org. [3]
AB 1880 by Assemblymember Juan Alanis, R-Modesto, and SB 764 by Sen. Steve Padilla, D-San Diego, expand California’s landmark child actor law, known as the Coogan Act, to cover children and ...
"Think. Check. Submit." poster by an international initiative to help researchers avoid predatory publishing. Predatory publishing, also write-only publishing [1] [2] or deceptive publishing, [3] is an exploitative academic publishing business model, where the journal or publisher prioritizes self-interest at the expense of scholarship.
However, open preprint servers since the 1990s increased the scale and visibility of this process and raised the question as to whether this constituted 'prior publication' or merely 'sharing'. The majority of academic journal publishers now accept submission of articles that have already been shared as preprints, with copyright of this version ...
IEEE/ACM Transactions on Computational Biology and Bioinformatics Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association Journal of Bioinformatics and Computational Biology
As applied to distribution, A.B. 1831's obscenity requirement follows the approach that New York University law professor Rosalind Bell recommended in a 2012 law review article. Bell argued that ...