Show HN: Octosphere, a tool to decentralise scientific publishing

(octosphere.social)

31 points | by crimsoneer 5 hours ago ago

12 comments

  • verdverm 5 hours ago

    Are you aware of the current efforts by researchers on Bluesky to build a new researchers platform on ATProto? (Forget the project name at the moment)

    If not, same handle over there, I can get you in touch with them. Or hit up Boris, he knows everyone and is happy to make connections

    There's also a full day at the upcoming conference on ATProto & scientific related things. I think they com on discourse more (?)

  • 11101010010001 an hour ago

    Yes publishing is broken, but academics are the last people to jump onto platforms...they never left email. If you want to change the publishing game, turn publishing into email.

  • gnarlouse 3 hours ago

    Integrate them peer review process and you’ve got a disrupter

    • mlpoknbji 3 hours ago

      Peer review should be disrupted, but doing peer review via social media is not the way to go.

      • perching_aix 2 hours ago

        Has a bit of a leg up in that if it's only academics commenting, it would probably be way more usable than typical social media, maybe even outright good.

    • crimsoneer 3 hours ago

      Right? This is kind of the dream.

    • naasking 3 hours ago

      Calling it peer review suggests gatekeeping. I suggest no gatekeepind just let any academic post a review, and maybe upvote/downvote and let crowdsourcing handle the rest.

      • staplers 2 hours ago

        While I appreciate no gatekeeping, the other side of the coin is gatekeeping via bots (vote manipulation).

        Something like rotten tomatoes could be useful. Have a list of "verified" users (critic score) in a separate voting column as anon users (audience score).

        This will often serve useful in highly controversial situations to parse common narratives.