listings emphasize the connection between data posted by governments and public institutions and the interfaces people are building to explore that data.
A blog to communicate about the Data Commons Project and keep track of all the cool things we are doing to create the Data Commons Cooperative, a hybrid worker and consumer owned cooperative providing data services to members of the rooted economy.
The Panton Principles are a set of recommendations that address how best to make published data from scientific studies available for re-use. In this context, “published” means “made public” and is not restricted to formal publication in the scholarly literature.
Open Data Commons is the home of a set of legal ‘tools’ to help you provide and use open data. Open Data Commons exists to provide legal solutions for open data. In March 2008 it launched the first ever open data license: the Public Domain Dedication and License (PDDL). Open Data Commons is an Open Knowledge Foundation project run by its Advisory Council and like the Foundation is a not-for-profit effort working for the benefit of the general open knowledge community.
This a guide to licensing data aimed particularly at those who want to make their data open. The first section deals with the practical question of how to license your data. The second section discusses what kinds of rights (intellectual property or other) exist in data in various jurisdictions.
This memo provides information for the Internet community interested in distributing data or databases under an “open access” structure. There are several definitions of “open” and “open access” on the Internet, including the Open Knowledge Definition and the Budapest Declaration on Open Access; the protocol laid out herein is intended to conform to the Open Knowledge Definition and extend the ideas of the Budapest Declaration to data and databases.
A table summarises the coverage of main UK research funders' policies and the support infrastructure provided. Clarifications and links to the policies and guidance are available in the sections that follow.
more on the NYT story about open data this week: "In fact, the only thing that should be surprising about this is the fact that anyone is surprised by it, or that anyone continues to insist patents are necessary in this kind of research. We've already seen how large groups of scientists sharing data leads to faster advancement in those fields, and how data that is locked up leads to slower advancement in research."