Sci-Hub “Pirate Bay of Science” Blocked in Russia Over Medical Studies

Many of Sci-Hub’s domains have been blocked in Russia following a complaint from academic publisher Springer Nature. According to a complaint filed with the Moscow City Court, the ‘pirate’ research paper platform offered three studies covering heart and brain health without obtaining an appropriate license.

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With its massive library of research papers, Sci-Hub has been described as “The Pirate Bay of Science”.

The site is dedicated to providing open access to scientific knowledge, something which millions of individuals truly appreciate.

However, due to the copyrighted nature of much of the content provided by the platform, it has become public enemy #1 among academic publishers.

Site founder Alexandra Elbakyan’s mission is to tear down the paywalls for the good of humankind, a position that has been supported to varying degrees among academics themselves.

“When Sci-Hub became known, I thought that it will provide a good case against copyright law. When the law prevents science to develop, that law must be repealed,” Elbakyan wrote earlier this year.

That challenge to the law has seen Sci-Hub implicated in several copyright suits, including one filed by publishing giant Elsevier, three years ago. However, despite best efforts, Sci-Hub has remained online.

To tackle the site’s resilience, publishers have won ISP blocking orders in several jurisdictions, including Germany and more recently, Sweden. Now it is Russia’s turn to tighten the thumbscrews.

In a case filed recently by UK academic publisher Springer Nature Limited, the Moscow City Court was told that Sci-Hub is infringing the company’s copyrights and should, therefore, be subjected to blocking.

Listing “bulletproof” hosting company Quasi Networks Ltd and US-based CloudFlare as facilitating access to the site, Springer Nature complained that three specific works were being made available illegally by Sci-Hub.

The study papers that led to the block

As the above table obtained from the Court shows, the research papers cover topics of interest to the medical community in the spheres of heart and brain health – Effect of glucose-lowering therapies on heart failure, Nitric oxide signaling in cardiovascular health and disease, and Lactate in the brain: from metabolic end-product to signaling molecule.

These would ordinarily sit behind paywalls but thanks to Sci-Hub, their contents are available for everyone to absorb for free. It’s a situation that’s unacceptable to Springer Nature and the Moscow City Court was sympathetic to the company’s complaints.

A decision on preliminary interim measures was handed down last month, which compelled local telecoms watchdog Roscomnadzor to take action to undermine “technical conditions that ensure placement, dissemination and other use of the works”.

As a result, several Sci-Hub and Library Genesis domains (gen.lib.rus.ec, www.libgen.io, scihub.unblocked.gdn, lgmag.org, libgen.unblocked.gdn, sci-hub.tw and libgen.io) are now being rendered inaccessible by Russian Internet Service Providers.

“Access to the Sci-Hub site in Russia is closed by Roscomnadzor. It turns out that Springer’s scientific publishing house filed a lawsuit demanding to restrict access to the portal,” Sci-Hub founder Alexandra Elbakyan announced on social networks VK and Telegram.

Of course, Sci-Hub is no stranger to blocking efforts so has other domains up its sleeve. However, these can also be targeted by rightsholders, so Elbakyan encourages users to check for the latest updates.

“The spare domain sci-hub.se works but for how long, I can not guarantee. Therefore, to access Sci-Hub, use tools to circumvent Internet censorship – which you can search for in Google or by using the bot in Telegram: @scihubot,” Elbakyan concludes.

While Sci-Hub continues its mission to provide open access, it’s interesting to note the indirect effect the site is having on the academic community.

Last month, several prestigious European research councils announced a major push for Open Access publishing, designed to limit the influence of major copyright holders and “tear down” their paywalls.

On Thursday, Sci-Hub appeared to be completely offline everywhere. It is not clear what caused the outage.

Source: TF, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and more. We also have VPN reviews, discounts, offers and coupons.

Apple Music arrives on Amazon’s Echo speakers starting December 17

Subscribers can ask Alexa to play tracks, playlists, and radio stations.

Apple Music arrives on Amazon’s Echo speakers starting December 17

Enlarge (credit: Smith Collection/Gado/Getty Images)

Apple Music subscribers will have a new way to listen to music soon. Amazon announced that Apple Music will be available on Echo devices next month, beginning the week of December 17.

"We are committed to offering great music providers to our customers and since launching the Music Skill API to developers just last month, we’ve expanded the music selection on Alexa to include even more top tier services,"said Amazon Devices senior vice president David Limp in the statement. "We’re thrilled to bring Apple Music—one of the most popular music services in the US—to Echo customers this holiday."

Once the feature rolls out, users will be able to ask Alexa on Echo devices to play songs, artists, and albums from Apple Music after pairing their account to the Alexa mobile app. Subscribers can also ask Alexa to play curated playlists and radio stations, including Apple's Beats 1 station.

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Sirin’s Finney blockchain phone goes up for pre-order

The Finney is a smartphone with a 6 inch display, a Qualcomm Snapdragon 845 processor, 6GB of RAM, 128GB of storage, and… a bunch of features that let you use the phone as a cold storage wallet for cryptocurrency. Sirin Labs unveiled plans to lau…

The Finney is a smartphone with a 6 inch display, a Qualcomm Snapdragon 845 processor, 6GB of RAM, 128GB of storage, and… a bunch of features that let you use the phone as a cold storage wallet for cryptocurrency. Sirin Labs unveiled plans to launch the Finney earlier this year and now it’s up for […]

The post Sirin’s Finney blockchain phone goes up for pre-order appeared first on Liliputing.

Bcom Customer Service Center Germany: Booking.com will in Berlin massiv Stellen abbauen

Booking.com schließt eines seiner Berliner Call-Center und baut damit viele Arbeitsplätze ab. Der Buchungskonzern verlangt, dass für jede Minute per Code im Computer eingeben wird, was getan wurde. (Verdi, Berlin)

Booking.com schließt eines seiner Berliner Call-Center und baut damit viele Arbeitsplätze ab. Der Buchungskonzern verlangt, dass für jede Minute per Code im Computer eingeben wird, was getan wurde. (Verdi, Berlin)

Flexible Displays: Samsung-Zulieferer soll Infos nach China verkauft haben

Flexible Displays könnten die nächste Innovation bei Smartphones werden – entsprechend begehrt ist die Technik. Vorreiter Samsung muss sich jetzt mit einem Fall von möglichem Geheimnisverrat herumschlagen: Ein Zulieferer soll die Technik nach China ver…

Flexible Displays könnten die nächste Innovation bei Smartphones werden - entsprechend begehrt ist die Technik. Vorreiter Samsung muss sich jetzt mit einem Fall von möglichem Geheimnisverrat herumschlagen: Ein Zulieferer soll die Technik nach China verkauft haben. (Samsung, Wirtschaft)

Künstliche Intelligenz: Forscher entwickeln KI-Kolorierung für Anime

Die Zahl der Anime-Produktionen steigt weltweit, die Zahl der Zeichner hingegen nicht in gleichem Maße. Japanische Forscher haben daher eine automatisierte Kolorierung entwickelt, die Charaktere mit Hilfe von künstlicher Intelligenz einfärben kann. (KI…

Die Zahl der Anime-Produktionen steigt weltweit, die Zahl der Zeichner hingegen nicht in gleichem Maße. Japanische Forscher haben daher eine automatisierte Kolorierung entwickelt, die Charaktere mit Hilfe von künstlicher Intelligenz einfärben kann. (KI, Applikationen)

Actionspiel: Bioware plant Testphase für Anthem

Die Entwicklung von Anthem verläuft offenbar nach Plan: Kurz vor der Veröffentlichung im Februar 2019 kündigt Bioware eine Testphase an. Spieler auf allen drei Plattformen können sich bewerben. (Anthem, Rollenspiel)

Die Entwicklung von Anthem verläuft offenbar nach Plan: Kurz vor der Veröffentlichung im Februar 2019 kündigt Bioware eine Testphase an. Spieler auf allen drei Plattformen können sich bewerben. (Anthem, Rollenspiel)

IMHO: Valves “Ka-Ching” mit der Brechstange

Es klingelt seit Jahren in den Kassen des Unternehmens von Gabe Newell. Dabei ist die Firma tief verschuldet – und zwar in den Herzen der Gamer. Ein IMHO von Michael Wieczorek (Valve, Steam)

Es klingelt seit Jahren in den Kassen des Unternehmens von Gabe Newell. Dabei ist die Firma tief verschuldet - und zwar in den Herzen der Gamer. Ein IMHO von Michael Wieczorek (Valve, Steam)

Epic Games: Fortnite offenbar vor allem bei jüngeren Spielern beliebt

Das Actionspiel Fortnite von Epic Games ist weltweit erfolgreich, gilt bei Diskussionen unter Spielern aber mittlerweile oft als Kinderkram – laut einer neuen Studie offenbar nicht ganz zu Unrecht. (Fortnite, Studie)

Das Actionspiel Fortnite von Epic Games ist weltweit erfolgreich, gilt bei Diskussionen unter Spielern aber mittlerweile oft als Kinderkram - laut einer neuen Studie offenbar nicht ganz zu Unrecht. (Fortnite, Studie)

Rocket Report: Russia’s nuclear rocket, airspace wars, BFR changes explained

“Musk is still trying to find the sweet spot between performance… and cost.”

Rocket Report: Russia’s nuclear rocket, airspace wars, BFR changes explained

Enlarge (credit: Rocket Lab)

Welcome to Edition 1.27 of the Rocket Report! After a week off for Thanksgiving break, we're chock full of news about rockets and engines from around the world—some of which seem fanciful, and some of which are real developments.

As always, we welcome reader submissions, and if you don't want to miss an issue, please subscribe using the box below (the form will not appear on AMP-enabled versions of the site). Each report will include information on small-, medium-, and heavy-lift rockets as well as a quick look ahead at the next three launches on the calendar.

Virgin flies its rocket for the first time. No, it wasn't a powered flight, but Virgin Orbit did perform a "captive-carry" test flight on November 18 in Victorville, located to the northeast of Los Angeles. The company strapped its 21-meter LauncherOne rocket to a modified 747 aircraft and took to the skies. "The vehicles flew like a dream today," Virgin Orbit Chief Pilot Kelly Latimer said. "Everyone on the flight crew and all of our colleagues on the ground were extremely happy with the data we saw from the instruments on-board the aircraft, in the pylon, and on the rocket itself. From my perspective in the cockpit, the vehicles handled incredibly well, and perfectly matched what we've trained for in the simulators."

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