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Sure it has. The modern “scientific publishing” industry is much younger than science.



Yeah, it's the formal academic hiring system that hasn't yet figured out how to work without this. But of course, that's what eLife is trying to figure out: they're trying to separate recognition (in the published assessment) from publication. The big question will be whether those assessments will be able to play that role in academic rewards, because that's the root of the incentive system that preserves the status quo.


Being able to produce a bazzilion papers of low quality is also new.




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