Bribery offers from China rattle journal editors. Are they being scammed?

On November 12, 2024 Richard Addante, an associate editor at the journal Frontiers in Psychology, received an alarming email from someone purporting to be a faculty member at a university in China: "I have a lot of papers to publish, papers on computers, medicine, materials, and so on. If you can help me publish my paper, I’ll pay you $1500 as a referral fee."
Other editors in the United States and Europe have also received bribery proposals from the same Chinese email account in recent weeks. A long-known hotbed for paper mills, China has recently taken steps to curtail academic fraud. But observers say it remains business as usual there.
A joint investigation by Science and Retraction Watch earlier this year found paper mills in China and elsewhere have been bribing editors and planting agents on editorial boards for years.


