Dear All, Nature, one of the best scientific magazines, has come out with a special feature entitled "The Future of Publishing". Focus is on Open-Access. Below is the brief write-up about that. "After nearly 400 years in the slow-moving world of print, the scientific publishing industry is suddenly being thrust into a fast-paced online world of cloud computing, crowd sourcing and ubiquitous sharing. Long-established practices are being challenged by new ones - most notably, the open-access, author-pays publishing model. In this special issue, Nature takes a close look at the forces now at work in scientific publishing, and how they may play out over the coming decades." Here, in this Special Feature issue, Nature published several articles in various categories like Editorial, News, News Features, and Comments etc. They are detailed below. I hope you may like to read them. You can access it at http://www.nature.com/news/specials/scipublishing/index.html Editorial - Disciplinary action How scientists share and reuse information is driven by technology but shaped by discipline. News - Sham journals scam authors Con artists are stealing the identities of real journals to cheat scientists out of publishing fees. News Features - The true cost of science publishing Cheap open-access journals raise questions about the value publishers add for their money. News Features - The library reboot As scientific publishing moves to embrace open data, libraries and researchers are trying to keep up. News Features - The dark side of publishing The explosion in open-access publishing has fuelled the rise of questionable operators. Comment - Beyond the paper The journal and article are being superseded by algorithms that filter, rate and disseminate scholarship as it happens, argues Jason Priem. Comment - A fool's errand Objections to the Creative Commons attribution licence are straw men raised by parties who want open access to be as closed as possible, warns John Wilbanks. Comment - How to hasten open access Three advocates for a universally free scholarly literature give their prescriptions for the movement's next push, from findability to translations. Books and Arts - Q&A: Knowledge liberator Robert Darnton heads the world's largest collection of academic publications, the Harvard University Library system. He is also a driver behind the new Digital Public Library of America. Ahead of its launch in April, he talks about Google, science journals and the open-access debate. Careers - Open to possibilities Opting for open access means considering costs, journal prestige and career implications. Best Regards Madhuresh Singhal Senior Manager - Knowledge Services Advinus Therapeutics Ltd (A TATA Enterprise) 21 & 22, Phase 2, Peenya Industrial Area, Bangalore - 560058 Phone: +91 80 66553106 Meet us at BIO International Convention, April 22-25, 2013, Chicago, Illinois, USA (Booth # 4256) ************************************************************************************************* This email and its attachments are confidential and proprietary to Advinus Therapeutics Ltd. and are meant for the intended recipient only. If you are not the intended recipient, do not take any actions based on the contents of this message, except to permanently delete the message and its attachments and inform the sender immediately. ************************************************************************************************* -- This message has been scanned for viruses and dangerous content by MailScanner, and is believed to be clean.