tar,
Thanks for your kind comment.
I think my communication skills are still too bad to deliver our core values. Neither I nor my team is anti-capitalist. We are not trying to deny Capitalism here, but what we really want to say is that the current Journal system is neither efficient nor effective. If the current system is putting much of the necessities in the value chain of disseminating information around researchers right now, it would be perfectly fine that they make profit out of the system. One might argue, why would researchers use the current system when they actually do not have a critical role? I would say, or lots of academics has been, is, and will be saying , they're using the current system because it helps them find more opportunities. They publish in high Impact Factor journals, and they are likely to have tenure chances.
But many academics say that totally doesn't make sense. Impact Factors do not show the value of individual papers, but is a simple aggregation of those in a journal. Research outputs, or the researchers who created it, better be evaluated by its own value. Or if we had a better indicator of that value, it would be great to use such. But NOT impact factors. Thus we're proposing an alternative way to build such indicator to evaluate researches, why not assess them collectively? Currently most journals put around 3~4 reviewers for an article, determined by the editor of the journal. Why not ten, hundred, or thousands of peers in the same academic field?
Still we're not insisting that every researcher should have one say per one person in evaluating, like democracy. It's one say per one reputation. If some researchers had built more contributions and performances for a long time in his field than others, it's perfectly fine for them to have more influence. But why don't we do it with all the people in the same boat, not just secretly selected 3 random guys? It's just like what your signature is saying. None of us know better than all of us put together.
The thing we aim to make also has nothing to do with weapons, wars, nuclear, politics, or diplomacy. It's more about knowledges on those fields, and how they're shared. We don't want them to be strictly open to anybody, like you're concerned, but we want them to be controlled by the one who contributed to build that idea. We don't want any transmission happen without knowing who's at the other side. We want everyone to know what they're doing with whom, and refuse to do if they believe it's wrong, which must be decided on behalf of their own, not by the intermediary publishers.
Lastly, it's OK that you didn't open the links, and it's actually good thing that we never open a link on webs without knowing who posted that. Medium.com is one of the mostly used blog services in the world, and I believe you don't need to be worried click on that