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Sci-Hub offers Pirate Bay-like simplicity to researchers around the world

A screenshot of the Sci-Hub homepage from 2016.
Image used with permission by copyright holder
The music and movie industries might like to paint internet pirates as outliers — those who just don’t want to pay for the media they consume. It turns out though that you don’t have to live in your mother’s basement to pirate content. In fact, some of the world’s most eminent scientists do it, illegally downloading scientific papers they haven’t paid for.

It turns out that as much as people might complain about a lack of access to music, movies and TV shows and sometimes about the pricing, the situation is far more dire if your work depends on your access to research papers. Depending on where you live, you might be faced with large bills just to access research relevant to your field.

So, as with those in distant locales who want to watch the latest movies, those scientists use piratical sources to get what they need.

The big place they go to isn’t the Pirate Bay though, but Sci-Hub, an access portal to many of the world’s scientific papers, all available for free. It boasts an average of around 5 million downloads per month, a testament to just how popular the service is.

To journal publishers who provide legal access to these papers, though, that’s a lot of missed revenue. Unsurprisingly, they aren’t happy that so many people are skipping around their paywalls, but it’s not something that many scientists think twice about.

In the case of ScienceMag’s source, Iranian student Meysam Rahimi, he says he felt no guilt in using the site. Either he paid upward of $1,000 for access to the papers he needs (not an option due to his personal finances), or he downloads them for free from Sci-Hub.

High-priced journals “may be slowing down the growth of science severely,” he said, also pointing out that journals do little but publish the papers, so why should they profit so heavily from others’ work?

It’s not just those in far-flung places who use the site though. The U.S. is the fifth-biggest downloader, following behind Russia. In fact, a quarter of all paper downloads come from the 34 most wealthy nations in the world, which are the least likely to be affected by pricing and access to journals.

In total, 3 million individual IP addresses were tracked during ScienceMag’s research of Sci-Hub, though many more are thought to visit the site, since universities can often have the same IP regardless of user numbers. Considering many downloaders appear to come from U.S. and E.U. universities, that number could be much, much higher.

Although it is likely that some simply use the service because it is more convenient, not everyone is stealing from publications when they access the site. Indeed, many papers have been voluntarily donated by their authors, so it’s perfectly possible that the site is just the best place to access that material, especially with the blessing of the creator.

What do you think of the morality of using a site like Sci-Hub?

Jon Martindale
Jon Martindale is the Evergreen Coordinator for Computing, overseeing a team of writers addressing all the latest how to…
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