cjlee112 / spnet

selected papers network web engine
http://thinking.bioinformatics.ucla.edu/2011/07/02/open-peer-review-by-a-selected-papers-network/
GNU General Public License v2.0
40 stars 11 forks source link

########################### SelectedPapers.net Overview ###########################

Open Scientific Sharing with No Walls

SelectedPapers.net <https://selectedpapers.net>_ lets you recommend papers, comment on them, discuss them, or simply add them to your reading list.

But instead of "locking up" your comments within its own website - the "walled garden" strategy followed by other services - it explicitly shares these data in a way that people not on SelectedPapers.net can easily see. Any other service can see and use them too. It does this by using existing social networks such as Google+, so users of those social networks can see your recommendations and discuss them, even if they've never heard of SelectedPapers.net.

For example, if you're a Google+ user, you post comments on SelectedPapers.net using your usual Google+ identity and posting process, with key hashtags automatically added to identify the paper you are discussing. And of course your post will be seen by your usual Google+ audience -- in addition to people who see it on SelectedPapers.net.

So: if you want to strip the idea down to one sentence, it's this: given that social networks already exist, all we need for truly open scientific communication is a convention on a consistent set of tags and IDs <http://docs.selectedpapers.net/hashtags.html>_ for discussing papers. That makes it possible to integrate discussion from all social networks -- big and small -- as a single unified forum.

Getting Started

To see how it works, take a look here:

https://selectedpapers.net.

Under 'Recent activity' you'll see comments and recommendations of different papers, so far mostly on the arXiv.

Right now SelectedPapers.net works with Google+. Support for other social networks such as Twitter is coming soon. But here's how you can use it now:

Papers

Papers are the center of just about everything here. Here's what you can do with a paper:

Open Design

Note that thanks to our open design, you do not even need to create a SelectedPapers.net login. Instead, SelectedPapers.net authenticates with Google (for example) that you are signed in to Google+; you never give SelectedPapers.net your Google password or access to any confidential information.

Moreover, even when you are signed in to SelectedPapers.net using your Google sign-in, it cannot see any of your private posts, only those you posted publicly - in other words, exactly the same as what anybody on the Internet can see.