Gold/Diamond OA 2025: Transitional period

The second pass is complete. A couple of Indonesian universities fixed their malware problem, which was encouraging enough that I did a quick rescan of the 618 xx2/xm2 cases (journals that had malware or were unreachable/unworkable both last year and this)–and recovered 43 journals to some other status. (Not always to a/default, but usually.)

Now there are a few days of “massaging”–making sure data is consistent, adding the derived data used for the book, preparing the uploadable version of the spreadsheet. Then, no earlier than next Monday, comes the actual preparation of the book, followed by uploading the shared dataset.[Impatient? See the end of this message.]

Where things stand

The final dataset includes just over 20,000 journals (20,109), with another 1,099 exclusions in a separate tab (not used in calculations), That’s the first time over 20,000 (albeit just barely), and the number of “clean” journals (no special codes and articles as recently as 2023) is up slightly, to 18,779 from 18,460. Unfortunately, article count is essentially flat: 1,441,979, down from 1,442,328 in last year’s report. In addition to the 18,779 “a” there are 499 “bi” (articles within the last five years but not since 2022), 370 “xm” (malware–up from 313 last year) and, sigh, 461 “xx” (unreachable/unworkable), up from 139 last year.

That “xx” figure notably includes a brand-new “grayed” category: 54 journals with incompetent html to ask for cookie options, but in a manner that freezes the screen with an overall gray cast AFTER offering cookie options–so that the screen is entirely frozen. (I intuit this from a split-second offering before the graying–and from the one journal that fixed it between the first and second passes: the cookie options appear on top of the gray, such that you can make a choice and recover the active screen. Yes, this is true on Edge, Chrome and Firefox–and even after clearing all cookies in Edge.) Many Iranian journals–and others–have the sensible approach of putting cookie opti0ns at the foot of the screen, leaving the rest of the frame visible and active. It seems pretty clear that these too-clever “let’s force them to make cookie choices by freezing everything else” cases are mostly copied from one source, and involve lots of different institutions. Do these people ever try to use their journals?

As always, all of these numbers are subject to change during the cleanup/massaging process.

Exclusions are up considerably, to 1,099, with the jump mostly being to 505 “xm2” (repeated malware, up from 335). Other categories are up only slightly: 253 expired (no articles since 2020; up from 230, and 155 of the 253 show evidence of being continued by another journal); 254 removed from DOAJ (essentially flat, from 251 last year); 70 xx2 (repeatedly unavailable/unworkable), up from 51 last year; and 17 “xn” (not an OA journal), up from 12 last year–including seven journals requiring a login and at least one that has apparently dropped its OA status entirely.

So, on to the massaging and writing. Oh, if you’re impatient: The final dataset won’t be shared until it’s, you know, final: when the book is ready (but before the Diamond OA book is written). It’s possible that a tentative dataset with a name something like tentgoa10.xlsx might perhaps possibly be available on my website (waltcrawford.name) earlier, perhaps as early as May 12 or 13. Use at your own risk: if it’s there, it’s tentative.

 

 

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