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authorBryan Newbold <bnewbold@robocracy.org>2021-11-29 14:33:14 -0800
committerBryan Newbold <bnewbold@robocracy.org>2021-11-29 14:33:14 -0800
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+
+Relevant github issue: https://github.com/internetarchive/fatcat/issues/48
+
+
+## Investigate
+
+At least some of these DOIs actually seem valid, like
+`10.1026//1616-1041.3.2.86`. So shouldn't be re-writing them!
+
+ zcat release_extid.tsv.gz \
+ | cut -f1,3 \
+ | rg '\t10\.\d+//' \
+ | wc -l
+ # 59,904
+
+ zcat release_extid.tsv.gz \
+ | cut -f1,3 \
+ | rg '\t10\.\d+//' \
+ | pv -l \
+ > doubleslash_dois.tsv
+
+Which prefixes have the most double slashes?
+
+ cat doubleslash_dois.tsv | cut -f2 | cut -d/ -f1 | sort | uniq -c | sort -nr | head
+ 51220 10.1037
+ 2187 10.1026
+ 1316 10.1024
+ 826 10.1027
+ 823 10.14505
+ 443 10.17010
+ 186 10.46925
+ 163 10.37473
+ 122 10.18376
+ 118 10.29392
+ [...]
+
+All of the 10.1037 DOIs seem to be registered with Crossref, and at least some
+have redirects to the not-with-double-slash versions. Not all doi.org lookups
+include a redirect.
+
+I think the "correct thing to do" here is to add special-case handling for the
+pubmed and crossref importers, and in any other case allow double slashes.
+
+Not clear that there are any specific cleanups to be done for now. A broader
+"verify that DOIs are actually valid" push and cleanup would make sense; if
+that happens checking for mangled double-slash DOIs would make sense.