Matteo Lissandrini (AAU)
I totally feel the same.
I always publish pre-prints on my personal page (not arxiv, I have issues with the use of arxiv nowadays)
and usually the confs/journal I submit to have open proceedings.
Cheers,
Matteo
From: hackathon2019@bonsai.groups.io [hackathon2019@bonsai.groups.io] on behalf of Massimo Pizzol via Groups.Io [massimo@...]
Sent: Sunday, March 31, 2019 12:37 PM To: hackathon2019@bonsai.groups.io Subject: Re: [hackathon2019] Post-hackathon ontology group #ontology #followup Thanks Chris I don’t have any problem in publishing a preprint on archiv.org or similar open for comments, and prior to submission to a journal. But until this preprint is ready I am not comfortable in having a publicly accessible working paper, so my preference is still for a google docs with contributors only.
Massimo
From:
<hackathon2019@bonsai.groups.io> on behalf of "Chris Mutel via Groups.Io" <cmutel@...>
On Sat, 30 Mar 2019 at 13:29, Massimo Pizzol <massimo@...> wrote:
Sorry to post something somewhat off-topic, but this statement is not correct - peer-reviewed publications can absolutely be developed in the open, and even some vintage pay-for-access journals such as ES&T will allow you to publish pre-prints on e.g. archiv.org paper would be the supporting documentation for the choices and use of the ontology, I would strongly recommend that it a) be developed in the open, so that people can read up on its use, and any new changes that you might make, and b) be submitted to an truly open access journal such as ERL or PLOS One.
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