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How much for a fake authorship? Ad database reveals secrets of scientific fraud

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Why This Matters

This investigation into the online marketplace for fake research authorships highlights the growing scale and global reach of scientific fraud, which threatens the integrity of academic publishing and research credibility. For the tech industry, it underscores the importance of developing advanced detection tools and algorithms to combat such fraudulent activities and uphold trust in digital scholarly communication. Consumers and institutions must remain vigilant, leveraging technological solutions to identify and prevent the proliferation of fake research.

Key Takeaways

The cost of authorship slots on studies produced by papermills ranges from less than $100 to more than $5000, an analysis found. Credit: Ievgen Chabanov/Alamy

Researchers have amassed a data set of thousands of advertisements selling research-paper authorships online, shedding light on the global marketplace for academic fraud.

The collection — the largest of its kind — contains more than 18,700 adverts that were posted between March 2020 and early April 2026 by seven paper mills — businesses that produce fake or low-quality research and sell authorships. Together, the companies cater to academics in the Middle East, Central Asia, Eastern Europe and India.

Authorship for sale: Nature investigates how paper mills work

An analysis of the advert data found that a first-author slot on an article sold by a paper mill costs a median value of nearly US$800, with prices ranging from $57 to more than $5,600. The work is described in a preprint submitted to arXiv this week.

Researchers, publishers and indexing services could use the list of adverts to screen their publications and audit which journals and research topics are most likely to be targeted, says study co-author Reese Richardson, a metascientist at Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois.

“The preprint paints a valuable picture of the significant financial scale of these operations, underscoring the pressure put on researchers to publish in order to advance in their careers,” a spokesperson for the New Jersey-based publisher Wiley told Nature.

Global operations

Richardson and his colleagues archived 2,311 advertisements that were posted on the messaging app Telegram by three paper mills that seem to be based in India, Iraq and Uzbekistan. The team also identified 16,399 advertisements from the websites of four businesses thought to operate from Russia, Latvia, Kazakhstan and Ukraine.

“What we’re beginning to see here is a pattern of global operations and the platformization of social media and online websites to operate a global network of businesses and corporations that exist for the purposes of scientific and academic fraud,” says Sarah Eaton, who studies academic integrity and fraud at the University of Calgary in Canada. The data set “tells us an awful lot about the businesses, their marketing and some of their operations”.

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