Arbitral action and preventive methods against predatory journal practiceopen access
- Authors
- Park, Sung Pil; Lee, Eric Yong Joong; Suh, Ji Hee
- Issue Date
- Feb-2018
- Publisher
- Korean Council of Science Editors; Council of Asian Science Editors | Korean Council of Science Editors
- Keywords
- Asian Domain Name Dispute Resolution Center; Cybersquatting; Journal hijacking; Journal phishing; Uniform Domain-Name Dispute-Resolution Policy
- Citation
- Science Editing , v.5, no.1, pp 49 - 52
- Pages
- 4
- Indexed
- SCOPUS
ESCI
KCI
- Journal Title
- Science Editing
- Volume
- 5
- Number
- 1
- Start Page
- 49
- End Page
- 52
- URI
- https://scholarworks.dongguk.edu/handle/sw.dongguk/21506
- DOI
- 10.6087/kcse.118
- ISSN
- 2288-7474
- Abstract
- As open access model of journal publication increases, predatory journals, which deceive scholars to publish journals in fake database websites and exploit them for publishing fee, is also increasing. There are two types of predatory journals. First, journal hijacking and cybersquatting generally create fake database website by mimicking authentic database website, thereby defrauding scholars for publication fee. Second, journal phishing use scam emails to steal scholars' personal information. If scholars suffered damage from predatory journals, scholars can take either arbitral or judicial actions. Arbitral action follows arbitrational resolution process termed Uniform Domain-Name Dispute-Resolution Policy. Scholars can join Uniform Domain-Name Dispute-Resolution Policy proceeding with legal entity that has right to authentic database website, which will result in cancellation or transfer of fake database website. In contrast, scholars can take judicial action under Anti-cybersquatting Consumer Protection Act, which may help scholars to recover an actual monetary damage from predatory journals. Nonetheless, taking precaution to avoid predatory journals is the best course of action, rather than going through arduous cure procedures. Scholars may prevent predatory journals by carefully examining fake database website names or email addresses, or observing unreasonable number of published article issues in predatory journal websites.
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Collections - College of Law > Department of Law > 1. Journal Articles

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