Charges depend alot with field. People in medical fields generally pay $2,000 
per paper for open access, with their research grants supporting this - the 
idea being that medical information is useful and it is cheaper for the funding 
body to make their research widely available, than for libraries and medical 
professionals to purchase the articles. In many other fields this is much less 
common.

Supercomputing Frontiers and Innovations is open access and has no page 
charges. Conference papers are typically not open access, ISC has become a 
recent exception. Open access options are publisher specific, Springer can 
allow open access for a fee, ACM does allow free open access through a 
dedicated "authorizer link" and regular open access for a fee, IEEE conferences 
give no open access options (in particular affects SC) , though IEEE journals 
do have a fee for open access. For computational chemistry, not sure what the 
situation is with open access. To ensure wide dissemination, may people put 
their publications on arXiv, other pre-print/post-print servers or their 
homepage.

Many learned societies obtain a large fraction of their operating income from 
journal subscriptions. Due to automation, publication costs have declined 
significantly, but  the cost of journals have not matched this. Unfortunately, 
it is hard to change established income patterns.

Further reading includes:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Cost_of_Knowledge
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sci-Hub
 

On Fri, Feb 7, 2020, at 7:54 PM, Jörg Saßmannshausen wrote:
> Dear Prentice
> 
> yes and no. The issue here is open access, here reputable journals are 
> charging as well. 
> However, in general you are right, most journals, apart from open access, do 
> not charge you. They charge the libraries which are stocking their issues.
> 
> Predatory publishers is a big problem though. They are masking themselves 
> with 
> name similar to reputable journals but ask you to pay for their open access. 
> Their impact factor is very low as well. 
> 
> My rule is to stick to journals which are published by the learned societies. 
> 
> All the best
> 
> Jörg
> 
> Am Freitag, 7. Februar 2020, 11:40:41 GMT schrieb Prentice Bisbal via Beowulf:
> > On 2/6/20 8:36 PM, Gerald Henriksen wrote:
> > > On Tue, 4 Feb 2020 21:27:51 -0500, you wrote:
> > >> Assuming my work and writing is acceptable quality, how likely will I be
> > >> to
> > >> get published with just a master degree?
> > > 
> > > Can't answer that, but my understanding is that publishing in academic
> > > style journals costs money so that may also be a consideration for you
> > > even if you create something of interest and can work past the
> > > education/lack of institution.
> > 
> > A legitimate journal does not charge you to have your article published.
> > Journals that do are known as "predatory publishers" and usually are of
> > low-reputation. We recently had a seminar here at work on predatory
> > publishing and how to avoid it, which is how I know this.
> > 
> > Prentice
> > 
> > 
> > _______________________________________________
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