NAUČNI ČASOPIS ZA TEORIJU I PRAKSU BIBLIOTEKARSTVA
eISSN 2217-5563 ISSN (Print) 2217-5555
 





Ćirilica Latinica English
 


Jaime A. Teixeira da Silva
ORCID 0000-0003-3299-2772
Independent researcher, Miki-cho, Japan
jaimetex@yahoo.com

doi: 10.19090/cit.2025.46.79-85
No. 46 (maj 2025), str. 79-85


Duplicated or cloned preprints: the lack of across-the-board ethical regulation of preprint servers may risk leading to citation-abusive and curriculum vitae-enhancing practices


Summary

Preprints have become an attractive form of publication in recent years since they allow academics to advance the speed of publication by being able to publish almost instantaneously an often crude form of work, or research in progress, while offering a quantitative substitute to showcase early research efforts. Despite this positive set of aspects, outside of the intense debate of the role that preprints played in COVID-19 research, very little is being discussed in academic circles whether this purpose and privilege can be abused. This paper tempers over-enthusiastic preprint proponents by cautioning researchers who may seek to overly amplify the visibility of their research efforts using preprints, specifically by abusing multiple preprint servers to clone the same work as many times as possible, taking advantage of the absence of stringent preprint ethics, moderation and verification policies, to gain greater exposure, readership and citations of their work. At the heart of this exercise lies the question: What is the limit to the number of copies of work, disseminated via preprints, that is allowed or acceptable? Several cases are provided to illustrate these arguments and risks.


Keywords:

ethics, insufficient regulation, peer-reviewed literature, policies, transparency


Submitted: 1th October 2024
Correction to the manuscript: 23th March 2025
Accepted for publication: 2th April 2025

Creative Commons License
Duplicated or cloned preprints... by Jaime A. Teixeira da Silva is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.


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