Today’s Solutions: January 15, 2025

Universities spend millions every year on academic journal subscriptions for their students and faculty. And while these costs may be manageable for some, they are prohibitive for many less wealth scholars and institutions around the world. That’s why a group of European science funders is going after publishers and demanding them to make it free for the public to read published research papers by 2020. Here’s how the coalition of science funders is mounting pressure on publishers to make research papers free.

Solutions News Source Print this article
More of Today's Solutions

New CFBP regulations erase medical debt from credit reports

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM In a bold move to protect consumers burdened by medical debt, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) unveiled ...

Read More

A hidden crisis: what LA residents need to know about water safety after wild...

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM As Los Angeles begins to heal from the wildfires that have devastated neighborhoods and left thousands displaced, a ...

Read More

Taking an afternoon nap may make your brain healthier

If you love to indulge in a feel-good siesta, then we have good news for you: those afternoon moments of slumber might be benefiting ...

Read More

Scientists gain ground in the race to reverse aging

So many of us do so much to keep ourselves healthy and live long lives. We exercise, we hydrate, we eat right, and we ...

Read More