viXra

viXra is an electronic e-print archive set up by independent physicist Philip Gibbs as an alternative to the dominant arXiv service operated by Cornell University. Its name comes from arXiv spelled backwards.[1]

viXra
Type of site
Science
Available inEnglish
OwnerPhilip Gibbs
URLviXra.org
CommercialNo
Launched2009
Current statusOnline

Description

Although dominated by physics and mathematics submissions, viXra aims to cover topics across the whole scientific community. It accepts submissions without requiring authors to have an academic affiliation and without any threshold for quality.[1] The e-prints on viXra are grouped into seven broad categories: physics, mathematics, computational science, biology, chemistry, humanities, and other areas.[2] Anyone may post anything on viXra, though house rules do prohibit “vulgar, libellous, plagiaristic or dangerously misleading” content.[3] As a result, the site has a reputation among physicists for hosting "material of no interest".[4] Physicist Gerard 't Hooft writes, "When a paper is published in viXra, it is usually a sign that it is not likely to contain acceptable results. It may, but the odds against that are considerable".[5]

Gibbs originally started the archive to cater to researchers who believed that their preprints had been unfairly rejected or reclassified by the arXiv moderators.[6] As of 2013, it had over 4000 preprints,[7] and in June 2020, the number had grown to 35,933.[8]

gollark: Oh, it'll run fine on CPU.
gollark: Install transformers, something something pipeline, set device to CUDA accelerators if you have any, I forgot the rest.
gollark: I have CUDA installed, it's just annoying.
gollark: What?
gollark: And it would pay for the annoyance of maintaining the CUDA toolchain and stuff on here.

References

  1. "What’s arXiv spelled backwards? A new place to publish". Nature News Blog. 16 July 2009.
  2. "ViXra.org open e-print archive". viXra.org. Retrieved 22 August 2011.
  3. Becker, Kate (2016-10-27). "What Counts as Science?". Nautilus. Retrieved 2017-11-28.
  4. Reyes-Galindo, Luis (2016-04-29). "Automating the Horae: Boundary-work in the age of computers" (PDF). Social Studies of Science. 46 (4): 586–606. arXiv:1603.03824. Bibcode:2016arXiv160303824R. doi:10.1177/0306312716642317. PMID 28948871.
  5. 't Hooft, Gerard (2017-11-15). "The importance of recognising fringe science" (PDF). Institute for Theoretical Physics, Utrecht University. Retrieved 2017-11-28.
  6. Cartwright, Jon (15 July 2009). "Fledgling site challenges arXiv server". Physics World. 22 (8): 9. Bibcode:2009PhyW...22h...9C. doi:10.1088/2058-7058/22/08/14. Archived from the original on 6 November 2011. Retrieved 16 January 2015.
  7. Gibbs, Philip E. (2013), "A Good Year for viXra", Prespacetime Journal, 4 (1): 87–90.
  8. Official site (front page)
  • Official website
  • Kelk, David; Devine, David (2012). "A Scienceographic Comparison of Physics Papers from the arXiv and viXra Archives". arXiv:1211.1036 [cs.DL].


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