TL;DRAbstract
Culminating a decade-long legal saga, the Second Circuit Court of Appeals in New York ruled last week that two U.S. physics societies did not engage in false advertising when they published a survey showing that physics journals published by Gordon and Breach Science Publishers (G&B) cost more than anyone else's did. The court reaffirmed an August 1997 decision that had called the suit part of a “global campaign by G&B to suppress all adverse comment upon its journals.”
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Culminating a decade-long legal saga, the Second Circuit Court of Appeals in New York ruled last week that two U.S. physics societies did not engage in false advertising when they published a survey showing that physics journals published by Gordon and Breach Science Publishers (G&B) cost more than anyone else's did. The court reaffirmed an August 1997 decision that had called the suit part of a “global campaign by G&B to suppress all adverse comment upon its journals.”
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