Shared from www.sciencemag.org
The frustrated science student behind Sci-hub
Beyond being the
founder of Sci-Hub, the world’s largest pirate site for academic papers, and risking arrest as a result, Alexandra Elbakyan is a typical
science graduate student: idealistic, hard-working, and relatively poor. In
1988, when Elbakyan was born in Kazakhstan, the Soviet Union was just beginning
to crumble. Books about dinosaurs and evolution fascinated her early on. “I
also remember reading Soviet science books that provided scientific
explanations for miraculous events thought previously to be produced by gods or
magic.” She was hooked.
At university in the Kazakh capital, she discovered a
knack for computer hacking. It appealed to her because “unlike higher
programming languages that are created by people and are volatile,” making and
breaking computer security systems requires a deeper knowledge of mathematics
and the primitive “assembly language” that computers use to move information.
Like
so many of Kazakhstan’s brightest, Elbakyan left the country to pursue her
dreams. First she worked in Moscow in computer security for a year, and then
she used the earnings to launch herself to the University of Freiburg in
Germany in 2010, where she joined a brain-computer interface project. She was
lured by the possibility that such an interface could one day translate the
thought content from one mind and upload it to another. But the work fell short
of her dreams. “The lab activity was spiritless,” she says. “There
was no feeling of pursuing a higher goal.”
Elbakyan did find
a community of like-minded researchers in transhumanism, a lofty field that
encompasses not just neuroscience and computer technology but also philosophy
and even speculative fiction about the future of humanity. She discovered a
transhumanism conference in the United States and set her heart on attending,
but she struggled to get a U.S. visa. She was rejected the first time and only
barely made it to the conference. With the remainder of her summer visa, she
did a research internship at Georgia Institute of Technology in Atlanta. When
she got back to Kazakhstan, frustration with the barriers that scientists face
would soon lead her to create Sci-Hub—an awe-inspiring act of altruism or a
massive criminal enterprise, depending on whom you ask.
Publisher paywalls are the bane of scientists and
students in Kazakhstan, she says, and the existing solution was cumbersome: Post
a request on Twitter to #IcanhazPDF with your email address. Eventually, a
generous researcher at some university with access to the journal will send you
the paper.
What was needed, she decided, was a system that
allowed that paper to be shared with absolutely everyone. She had the computer
skills—and contacts with other pirate websites to make that happen, and so
Sci-Hub was born. Elbakyan sees the site as a natural extension of her dream of
helping humans share good ideas. “Journal paywalls are an example of something
that works in the reverse direction,” she says, “making communication less open
and efficient.”
Running a pirate site and being sued for what is
likely to be millions of dollars in damages hasn’t stopped Elbakyan from
pursuing an academic career. Her neuroscience research is on hold, but she has
enrolled in a history of science master’s program at a “small private
university” in an undisclosed location. Appropriately enough, her thesis
focuses on scientific communication. “I perceive Sci-Hub as a practical side of
my research.”
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