{The unchanged changing world of mathematical publishing} {Joachim Heinze} {1. A very short overview of the history of mathematical publishing with some Springer examples is given. \textsl{Numerische Mathematik} was the first of all SpringerNature journals ever over all disciplines to go online in 1994. 2. The change of the world of publishing: generating (scientists), composing (publishers and scientists) and disseminating (librarians and publishers) mathematical content in electronically form. \TeX{} and ``online visibility'' are the buzzwords here. 3. Open access for all mathematical content? ``New'' initiatives like ``Overlay Journals'', based on arXiv, are briefly discussed, as well as the more recent Sci-Hub and ResearchGate initiatives. 4. Keep track of what has been published and cited. MathSciNet and zbMATH, the two big math review journals, in comparison to other initiatives, like Google Scholar/xs.glgoo.com, Scopus, and Web of Science. A new initative from China? MathSciDoc. 5. Recent developments in the dissemination of scientific information are discussed. Social media (Scholarly Collaboration Networks (\acro{SCN})) in scientific communication and some new initiatives such as ``Sharedit'' and ``SciGraph'' are briefly reflected upon. Artificial intelligence and some hope for the future will close the presentation. }