The price of information
Academics are starting to boycott a big publisher of journals
SOMETIMES it takes but a single pebble to start an avalanche. On January 21st Timothy Gowers, a mathematician at Cambridge University, wrote a blog post outlining the reasons for his longstanding boycott of research journals published by Elsevier. This firm, which is based in the Netherlands, owns more than 2,000 journals, including such top-ranking titles as Cell and the Lancet. However Dr Gowers, who won the Fields medal, mathematics's equivalent of a Nobel prize, in 1998, is not happy with it, and he hoped his post might embolden others to do something similar.
This article appeared in the Science & technology section of the print edition under the headline “The price of information”

From the February 4th 2012 edition
Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents
Explore the edition
Electric vehicles also cause air pollution
Though fume-free, their brake pads and tyres disintegrate over time

AI models are helping dirty industries go green
Mining companies and steelmakers are feeling the benefits

Could data centres ever be built in orbit?
A startup called Starcloud has plans to do just that
The tricky task of calculating AI’s energy use
Making models less thirsty may not lessen their environmental impact
AI models can help generate cleaner power
Energy companies are using them to increase efficiency and spot problems
Researchers lift the lid on how reasoning models actually “think”
They plan sentences far in advance. They also bullshit themselves when reasoning out loud