Hi all. Lodewijk today forwarded me this interesting EU consultation about open access, open data and digital preservation for scientific information.
Press release: http://europa.eu/rapid/pressReleasesAction.do?reference=IP/11/890
Consultation: http://ec.europa.eu/research/consultations/scientific_information/consultati...
It could be very, very interesting if we (as Wikimedia Movement, or Wikimedia chapters) could write a statement to contribute. Maybe our brand-new Open Access WMF fellow could be interested in coordinating :-D
Anyway, it seems a good opportunity to put in (digital) paper what we think about these issues.
Any thoughts? We have until September 9th.
Aubrey
Hi Aubrey,
thanks for the invitation. I had indeed planned to set up a document to facilitate collaborative drafting of a response. So far, I have seen the Open Knowledge Foundation, the Euroscience Working Group on Open Access as well as Eurodoc signaling an interest in drafting a response, and doing it all together - perhaps with an individual comment per organization - could be worth a try.
The questionnaire comes in three variants - for citizens, organisations and public bodies - and the session to fill it in is time-limited, so we will have to set up an editable copy somewhere. The Commission provided a PDF ( http://ec.europa.eu/research/consultations/scientific_information/questionna... ) whose text cannot be copied, and I inquired with them on July 16 to provide another version of the file. My submission was "forwarded to the technical unit" two days later but no reaction since - I just dropped them a line again.
To get things started, I just set up http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/RCom/OA/EU . Please chime in there.
Thanks and cheers,
Daniel
On Thu, Jul 28, 2011 at 11:49 AM, Andrea Zanni zanni.andrea84@gmail.com wrote:
Hi all. Lodewijk today forwarded me this interesting EU consultation about open access, open data and digital preservation for scientific information.
Press release: http://europa.eu/rapid/pressReleasesAction.do?reference=IP/11/890
Consultation: http://ec.europa.eu/research/consultations/scientific_information/consultati...
It could be very, very interesting if we (as Wikimedia Movement, or Wikimedia chapters) could write a statement to contribute. Maybe our brand-new Open Access WMF fellow could be interested in coordinating :-D
Anyway, it seems a good opportunity to put in (digital) paper what we think about these issues.
Any thoughts? We have until September 9th.
Aubrey
Libraries mailing list Libraries@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/libraries
Problem solved; full text now on http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/RCom/OA/EU . Daniel
On Thu, Jul 28, 2011 at 2:26 PM, Daniel Mietchen daniel.mietchen@googlemail.com wrote:
Hi Aubrey,
thanks for the invitation. I had indeed planned to set up a document to facilitate collaborative drafting of a response. So far, I have seen the Open Knowledge Foundation, the Euroscience Working Group on Open Access as well as Eurodoc signaling an interest in drafting a response, and doing it all together - perhaps with an individual comment per organization - could be worth a try.
The questionnaire comes in three variants - for citizens, organisations and public bodies - and the session to fill it in is time-limited, so we will have to set up an editable copy somewhere. The Commission provided a PDF ( http://ec.europa.eu/research/consultations/scientific_information/questionna... ) whose text cannot be copied, and I inquired with them on July 16 to provide another version of the file. My submission was "forwarded to the technical unit" two days later but no reaction since - I just dropped them a line again.
To get things started, I just set up http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/RCom/OA/EU . Please chime in there.
Thanks and cheers,
Daniel
On Thu, Jul 28, 2011 at 11:49 AM, Andrea Zanni zanni.andrea84@gmail.com wrote:
Hi all. Lodewijk today forwarded me this interesting EU consultation about open access, open data and digital preservation for scientific information.
Press release: http://europa.eu/rapid/pressReleasesAction.do?reference=IP/11/890
Consultation: http://ec.europa.eu/research/consultations/scientific_information/consultati...
It could be very, very interesting if we (as Wikimedia Movement, or Wikimedia chapters) could write a statement to contribute. Maybe our brand-new Open Access WMF fellow could be interested in coordinating :-D
Anyway, it seems a good opportunity to put in (digital) paper what we think about these issues.
Any thoughts? We have until September 9th.
Aubrey
Libraries mailing list Libraries@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/libraries
Thank you Daniel, great work. Lodewijk was suggesting that we reply as an organization, because they don't really count single citizens proposals. If we manage to write something, we could then forward it many times, one per chapter, in several languages :-)
But first things first, we need to work on the draft.
Aubrey
2011/7/28 Daniel Mietchen daniel.mietchen@googlemail.com:
Problem solved; full text now on http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/RCom/OA/EU . Daniel
On Thu, Jul 28, 2011 at 2:26 PM, Daniel Mietchen daniel.mietchen@googlemail.com wrote:
Hi Aubrey,
thanks for the invitation. I had indeed planned to set up a document to facilitate collaborative drafting of a response. So far, I have seen the Open Knowledge Foundation, the Euroscience Working Group on Open Access as well as Eurodoc signaling an interest in drafting a response, and doing it all together - perhaps with an individual comment per organization - could be worth a try.
The questionnaire comes in three variants - for citizens, organisations and public bodies - and the session to fill it in is time-limited, so we will have to set up an editable copy somewhere. The Commission provided a PDF ( http://ec.europa.eu/research/consultations/scientific_information/questionna... ) whose text cannot be copied, and I inquired with them on July 16 to provide another version of the file. My submission was "forwarded to the technical unit" two days later but no reaction since - I just dropped them a line again.
To get things started, I just set up http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/RCom/OA/EU . Please chime in there.
Thanks and cheers,
Daniel
On Thu, Jul 28, 2011 at 11:49 AM, Andrea Zanni zanni.andrea84@gmail.com wrote:
Hi all. Lodewijk today forwarded me this interesting EU consultation about open access, open data and digital preservation for scientific information.
Press release: http://europa.eu/rapid/pressReleasesAction.do?reference=IP/11/890
Consultation: http://ec.europa.eu/research/consultations/scientific_information/consultati...
It could be very, very interesting if we (as Wikimedia Movement, or Wikimedia chapters) could write a statement to contribute. Maybe our brand-new Open Access WMF fellow could be interested in coordinating :-D
Anyway, it seems a good opportunity to put in (digital) paper what we think about these issues.
Any thoughts? We have until September 9th.
Aubrey
Libraries mailing list Libraries@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/libraries
Libraries mailing list Libraries@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/libraries
[sorry for cross-posting]
I wanted to remind you all that the deadline of the European consultation on Open Access and Open Data is September 9th. Here's the link: http://ec.europa.eu/research/consultations/scientific_information/consultati...
and here's the survey on Meta: http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/RCom/OA/EU
Daniel is working on that, but feedback could be useful.
Here my few cents about some proposals we could make in the comment sections ofthe survey:
1. We need strategies/policies for OA. We need institutions/university to *require* OAfrom doctoral students and researchers. 2. We need digital preservation to be done by libraries and archives, not publishers. They have right now the functions and services (access, dissemination, preservation) that should be accomplished by libraries. Preservation is an issue. 3. We need clear, easily understandable licenses. CC-BY for articles and CC-0 for research data should do their job. No more ad hoc, human-not-understandable licenses, but clear Creative Commons. (CC-BY= we can use that on Wikipedia, we can upload it on Commons, we can publish it on Wikisource, we have material for Wikibooks/Wikiversity, etc.)
I hope this can be useful.
Aubrey
2011/7/28 Andrea Zanni zanni.andrea84@gmail.com:
Thank you Daniel, great work. Lodewijk was suggesting that we reply as an organization, because they don't really count single citizens proposals. If we manage to write something, we could then forward it many times, one per chapter, in several languages :-)
But first things first, we need to work on the draft.
Aubrey
2011/7/28 Daniel Mietchen daniel.mietchen@googlemail.com:
Problem solved; full text now on http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/RCom/OA/EU . Daniel
On Thu, Jul 28, 2011 at 2:26 PM, Daniel Mietchen daniel.mietchen@googlemail.com wrote:
Hi Aubrey,
thanks for the invitation. I had indeed planned to set up a document to facilitate collaborative drafting of a response. So far, I have seen the Open Knowledge Foundation, the Euroscience Working Group on Open Access as well as Eurodoc signaling an interest in drafting a response, and doing it all together - perhaps with an individual comment per organization - could be worth a try.
The questionnaire comes in three variants - for citizens, organisations and public bodies - and the session to fill it in is time-limited, so we will have to set up an editable copy somewhere. The Commission provided a PDF ( http://ec.europa.eu/research/consultations/scientific_information/questionna... ) whose text cannot be copied, and I inquired with them on July 16 to provide another version of the file. My submission was "forwarded to the technical unit" two days later but no reaction since - I just dropped them a line again.
To get things started, I just set up http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/RCom/OA/EU . Please chime in there.
Thanks and cheers,
Daniel
On Thu, Jul 28, 2011 at 11:49 AM, Andrea Zanni zanni.andrea84@gmail.com wrote:
Hi all. Lodewijk today forwarded me this interesting EU consultation about open access, open data and digital preservation for scientific information.
Press release: http://europa.eu/rapid/pressReleasesAction.do?reference=IP/11/890
Consultation: http://ec.europa.eu/research/consultations/scientific_information/consultati...
It could be very, very interesting if we (as Wikimedia Movement, or Wikimedia chapters) could write a statement to contribute. Maybe our brand-new Open Access WMF fellow could be interested in coordinating :-D
Anyway, it seems a good opportunity to put in (digital) paper what we think about these issues.
Any thoughts? We have until September 9th.
Aubrey
Libraries mailing list Libraries@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/libraries
Libraries mailing list Libraries@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/libraries
Dear all,
I completed a first draft: http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/RCom/OA/EU .
Daniel
On Fri, Aug 26, 2011 at 6:47 PM, Andrea Zanni zanni.andrea84@gmail.com wrote:
[sorry for cross-posting]
I wanted to remind you all that the deadline of the European consultation on Open Access and Open Data is September 9th. Here's the link: http://ec.europa.eu/research/consultations/scientific_information/consultati...
and here's the survey on Meta: http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/RCom/OA/EU
Daniel is working on that, but feedback could be useful.
Here my few cents about some proposals we could make in the comment sections ofthe survey:
- We need strategies/policies for OA. We need institutions/university
to *require* OAfrom doctoral students and researchers. 2. We need digital preservation to be done by libraries and archives, not publishers. They have right now the functions and services (access, dissemination, preservation) that should be accomplished by libraries. Preservation is an issue. 3. We need clear, easily understandable licenses. CC-BY for articles and CC-0 for research data should do their job. No more ad hoc, human-not-understandable licenses, but clear Creative Commons. (CC-BY= we can use that on Wikipedia, we can upload it on Commons, we can publish it on Wikisource, we have material for Wikibooks/Wikiversity, etc.)
I hope this can be useful.
Aubrey
2011/7/28 Andrea Zanni zanni.andrea84@gmail.com:
Thank you Daniel, great work. Lodewijk was suggesting that we reply as an organization, because they don't really count single citizens proposals. If we manage to write something, we could then forward it many times, one per chapter, in several languages :-)
But first things first, we need to work on the draft.
Aubrey
2011/7/28 Daniel Mietchen daniel.mietchen@googlemail.com:
Problem solved; full text now on http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/RCom/OA/EU . Daniel
On Thu, Jul 28, 2011 at 2:26 PM, Daniel Mietchen daniel.mietchen@googlemail.com wrote:
Hi Aubrey,
thanks for the invitation. I had indeed planned to set up a document to facilitate collaborative drafting of a response. So far, I have seen the Open Knowledge Foundation, the Euroscience Working Group on Open Access as well as Eurodoc signaling an interest in drafting a response, and doing it all together - perhaps with an individual comment per organization - could be worth a try.
The questionnaire comes in three variants - for citizens, organisations and public bodies - and the session to fill it in is time-limited, so we will have to set up an editable copy somewhere. The Commission provided a PDF ( http://ec.europa.eu/research/consultations/scientific_information/questionna... ) whose text cannot be copied, and I inquired with them on July 16 to provide another version of the file. My submission was "forwarded to the technical unit" two days later but no reaction since - I just dropped them a line again.
To get things started, I just set up http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/RCom/OA/EU . Please chime in there.
Thanks and cheers,
Daniel
On Thu, Jul 28, 2011 at 11:49 AM, Andrea Zanni zanni.andrea84@gmail.com wrote:
Hi all. Lodewijk today forwarded me this interesting EU consultation about open access, open data and digital preservation for scientific information.
Press release: http://europa.eu/rapid/pressReleasesAction.do?reference=IP/11/890
Consultation: http://ec.europa.eu/research/consultations/scientific_information/consultati...
It could be very, very interesting if we (as Wikimedia Movement, or Wikimedia chapters) could write a statement to contribute. Maybe our brand-new Open Access WMF fellow could be interested in coordinating :-D
Anyway, it seems a good opportunity to put in (digital) paper what we think about these issues.
Any thoughts? We have until September 9th.
Aubrey
Libraries mailing list Libraries@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/libraries
Libraries mailing list Libraries@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/libraries
Libraries mailing list Libraries@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/libraries