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kb:mendeley_import [2024/10/29 01:16] – [Using Mendeley Citations] dstillmankb:mendeley_import [2025/02/12 23:25] (current) – [How do I import a Mendeley library into Zotero?] dstillman
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   - Make sure that all data and files have been synced to Mendeley servers.   - Make sure that all data and files have been synced to Mendeley servers.
-    * If you use **Mendeley Desktop**, check your sync settings to make sure that data and files are being synced, and confirm that you can open PDFs in your online Mendeley library. 
     * If you use **Mendeley Reference Manager**, your data and files are already all online.     * If you use **Mendeley Reference Manager**, your data and files are already all online.
-  - Make sure you're running at least Zotero 6, which contains the latest version of the importer as well as a [[/blog/zotero-6|new PDF reader]] that can display PDF annotations imported from Mendeley.+    * If you use **Mendeley Desktop**, check your sync settings to make sure that data and files are being synced, and confirm that you can open PDFs in your online Mendeley library. 
 +  - Make sure you're running the latest version of Zotero (Help → Check for Updates…).
   - Go to File → Import within Zotero and choose the "Mendeley Reference Manager (online import)" option.   - Go to File → Import within Zotero and choose the "Mendeley Reference Manager (online import)" option.
  
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 Zotero originally announced work on a fully local importer in early 2018, but a few months later, Elsevier began encrypting the local Mendeley database, making it unreadable by Zotero and other standard database tools. This change came despite Mendeley having long touted the openness of their database format as a guarantee against lock-in and explaining in documentation that the database could be accessed using standard tools. Mendeley Desktop itself had imported data from Zotero’s own open database since 2009. Zotero originally announced work on a fully local importer in early 2018, but a few months later, Elsevier began encrypting the local Mendeley database, making it unreadable by Zotero and other standard database tools. This change came despite Mendeley having long touted the openness of their database format as a guarantee against lock-in and explaining in documentation that the database could be accessed using standard tools. Mendeley Desktop itself had imported data from Zotero’s own open database since 2009.
  
-The [[https://www.mendeley.com/release-notes/v1_19|Mendeley 1.19 release notes]] claimed that the encryption was for “improved security” on shared machines, yet applications rarely encrypt their local data files, as file protections are generally handled by the operating system with account permissions and full-disk encryption, and someone using the same operating system account or an admin account can already install a keylogger to capture passwords. Mendeley later [[https://twitter.com/mendeley_com/status/1006915998841221120|switched to claiming]] that the change was required by new European privacy regulations — a bizarre claim, given that those regulations are designed to give people control over their data and guarantee data portability, not the opposite — and continued to assert, falsely, that full local export was still possible, while [[https://twitter.com/mendeley_com/status/1006919608471818240|repeatedly]] [[https://twitter.com/MendeleySupport/status/1006920802120470528|dismissing]] reports of the change as “#fakenews”.+The [[https://www.mendeley.com/release-notes/v1_19|Mendeley 1.19 release notes]] claimed that the encryption was for “improved security” on shared machines, yet applications rarely encrypt their local data files, as file protections are generally handled by the operating system with account permissions and full-disk encryption, and someone using the same operating system account or an admin account can already install a keylogger to capture passwords. Mendeley later [[https://twitter.com/mendeley_com/status/1006915998841221120|switched to claiming]] that the change was required by new European privacy regulations — a bizarre claim, given that those regulations are designed to give people control over their data and guarantee data portability, not the opposite — and continued to assert, falsely, that full local export was still possible, while [[https://twitter.com/mendeley_com/status/1006919608471818240|repeatedly]] [[https://web.archive.org/web/20211120213432/https://twitter.com/MendeleySupport/status/1006920802120470528|dismissing]] reports of the change as “#fakenews”.
  
-Direct access to the Mendeley database is the only fully local way to export the full contents of one’s own research. The export formats supported by Mendeley don’t contain folders, various metadata fields (date added, favorite, and others), or PDF annotations. While Mendeley offers a web-based API, it contains only uploaded data, so relying on it means that anyone wanting to export their own data first needs to upload all their data and files to Elsevier’s servers. The API is under Elsevier’s control and can be [[https://service.elsevier.com/app/answers/detail/a_id/31598/supporthub/mendeley/p/16075/|changed]] or [[https://blog.mendeley.com/2021/03/11/mendeley-refocusing-announcement-mobile-app-retirement/|discontinued]] at any time.+Direct access to the Mendeley database is the only fully local way to export the full contents of one’s own research. The export formats supported by Mendeley don’t contain folders, various metadata fields (date added, favorite, and others), or PDF annotations. While Mendeley offers a web-based API, it contains only uploaded data, so relying on it means that anyone wanting to export their own data first needs to upload all their data and files to Elsevier’s servers. The API is under Elsevier’s control and can be [[https://service.elsevier.com/app/answers/detail/a_id/31598/supporthub/mendeley/p/16075/|changed]] or [[https://mendeleyblog.wordpress.com/2021/03/11/mendeley-refocusing-announcement-mobile-app-retirement//|discontinued]] at any time.
  
 Since making this change, Elsevier has replaced Mendeley Desktop with Mendeley Reference Manager, which is essentially a wrapper around the website and doesn’t contain a real local database at all. Since making this change, Elsevier has replaced Mendeley Desktop with Mendeley Reference Manager, which is essentially a wrapper around the website and doesn’t contain a real local database at all.
kb/mendeley_import.1730179003.txt.gz · Last modified: 2024/10/29 01:16 by dstillman