@albertcardona "transferred back to #university #libraries where it belongs"
Agreed, but how to prevent such a service from turning into another extractive monopolist like JSTOR or OCLC?
@albertcardona Do you know any example of this proposed structure?
So far the only successful publicly owned services I've seen in USA are owned and run directly by state universities.
@albertcardona
IMO, one of the great services provided by google scholar is the ability to extract pubs in any citation format I wanted, mostly bibtex. Scopus has a similar service but it does not work as flawless as google scholar
Every entry at https://scholar.archive.org has a "quote" button: click it, and you are offered citations in these formats: MLA, Harvard, CSL-JSON and BibTeX. And note BibTeX can be imported into all kinds of citation tracking programs (ORCID, EndNote, Zotero, and more) or simply copy-pasted into your .bib file.