I saw a very interesting documentary about a South American country (Brazil? Argentina?) where they were already ignoring Western copyright law in order to free up collaboration in science. I have no idea what the legal repercussions are of doing something like that and from what I have seen on English Wikipedia, it still looks like Big Pharma rules the medical world. If we could somehow talk universities into daring to do open research, sharing data from the beginning, then that would be key moving forward. Now it seems to be a race in the dark to see who gets to publish first and the data is always reverse-engineered later. Sad.
On Wed, May 17, 2017 at 8:02 PM, Andrea Zanni zanni.andrea84@gmail.com wrote:
With that amount of money, we could probably put an end on closed science in less than a decade, and make open access and open science the new standard. There's already a lot of efforts going on, but incumbent publishers are much more rich and resourceful. Lobbying, advocacy, outreach could do a lot, from our part. We are probably better equipped to coordinate bottom-up efforts (hackathons, tools and whatnot), and we would be better suited for the whole diplomatic/political/top-down side of it.
Making open science the new standard would be a goal to itself and leverage for other results. We'd end up with a lot more free content for Wikimedia projects, probably better advocacy and outreach for us in Universities and research centers. We would spread and promote the Mertonian norms of science¹, which are already our values. Also, there's a fair chance for this new open science standard to sustain itself, as in the current system scientists and researchers *already* do research, publish and review for free.² A new paradigm for science and research could also be very important for developing countries, in which scientists are often required to adequate to mainstream science (eg. they are not able to research areas which would benefit their local community, like local diseases).
Aubrey
¹ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mertonian_norms ² of course they are paid by their institutions, but the "act of publishing" and the whole scholarship workflow is "embedded" and already paid for.
On Wed, May 17, 2017 at 7:38 PM, Amir E. Aharoni < amir.aharoni@mail.huji.ac.il> wrote:
Heh, I remember Mr Wales asking what could the movement do with a million dollars some time around 2006. Is anything on the horizon?
What could we do? Many things; one of them would be to get our act
together
and become a true leader in software and content localization. Currently
we
are proud about maintaining MediaWiki, a piece of software that is
probably
translated to more languages than any other, and that is great, but:
- Our software localization tooling, excellent as it is, didn't become
the
industry standard, even though it could with better packaging. Why is it important? Because a Wikipedia in a given language doesn't exist in isolation—it exists in an environment of other programs, sites,
platforms,
and media. There was a (relatively) thriving software localization community in the Catalan language already in the 1990s (!), so it's not surprising that Catalan Wikipedia was the first to start after English,
and
is among the most successful Wikimedia projects now. Making software localization better for everybody will bring computer usage to the whole world, and we can be the leaders in it, rather than leaving it to the corporations. 2. We have the theoretical ability to write articles in any language of
the
world, but not everybody actually does it. Some language communities need stronger nudges than others to get going: Training about translation and scientific writing, developing terminology, developing spelling dictionaries, developing keyboards that allow convenient typing, literacy programs, etc. In a lot of languages the Bible is the only published
book;
this happened thanks to donations from people who want to spread their religion around the world. If it can be done with the Bible, it can be
done
with an encyclopedia. 3. We are influencing public policy in the area of copyright law, but we should be influencing public policy around the whole world to make localized computing and content more accessible. Lobbying needs
resources.
See https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Talk:Strategy/Wikimedia_ movement/2017/Cycle_2/A_Truly_Global_Movement#Governments_ and_computer_vendors:_Accessibility_to_localization_technology
-- Amir Elisha Aharoni · אָמִיר אֱלִישָׁע אַהֲרוֹנִי http://aharoni.wordpress.com “We're living in pieces, I want to live in peace.” – T. Moore
2017-05-17 20:08 GMT+03:00 David Cuenca Tudela dacuetu@gmail.com:
Are there any activities that could have a meaningful impact if we ask donors for such amount of seed money? Are there reasons to do so?
Do we have the guts to do so?
Do we have the organizational capital to handle it? Or can we get there soon?
Do we have the moral right to take a lead in the world and ask for as
much
resources as needed?
Is our leader and our members willing to take big undertakings?
Are most of us ready to live in fear while the values that we cherry
most
would crumble under our own eyes?
Would it matter much if we as a movement would disappear? Or is it a struggle always a positive answer against the shadows in the world?
Can we offer anything else in this world than truth, free knowledge,
and
an
open inclusive environment?
Would you take best wishes from a stranger like me?
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