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For information on using this service check out the guide.
Have feedback (questions, bugs, etc)? Email us at info@okfn.org.
To: djwild@india....
Subject: Open Data in J.Cheminformatics
Date: Sat Feb 20 13:15:17 2010
Status: Sent
Dr Christoph Steinbeck (Eur. Bioinf, Inst.) Dr David Wild (Indiana Univ.)
Dear David and Christoph
I am writing ask you (as editors) about the Openness of data published in J. Cheminformatics. Open data is now essential for information-driven science and one of the important goals is to make it clear to humans and machines which data are fully Open. The Open Knowledge Foundation has produced a definition of Open Knowledge [1] which in simple terms allows anyone to download, and re-use the data for any legitimate purpose. The CC-BY license, which you use, is automatically compatible with the Open definition but it would be extremely helpful to have confirmation of that.
Assuming you agree, as a further and culture-changing step we would ask you to add "Open Data" buttons to the material you publish. These would function technically in the same way as Open Access buttons (which you already use) and link through to the OKF's Open Definition [1]. This promotes the idea of Open Data and will allow machines as well as humans to extract and index your data in the confident knowledge that they have the authors' and journal's blessing.
Best
Peter Murray-Rust
[1] http://www.opendefinition.org/1.0/ [2] http://www.opendefinition.org/licenses/
--
Sent by "Is It Open Data?" (http://isitopen.ckan.net/about/)
A service which helps scholars (and others) to request information
about the status and licensing of information.
To: Is It Open Enquiry Service <isitopen@okfn.org>, Peter Murray-Rust <pm286@cam.....
Subject: Re: Open Data in J.Cheminformatics
Date: Sat Feb 20 14:30:04 2010
Status: Response
Requst Received
Jan can we do this?
David
Sent from my iPhone
On Feb 20, 2010, at 8:30 AM, Is It Open Enquiry Service <isitopen.okfn.org> wrote:
Dr Christoph Steinbeck (Eur. Bioinf, Inst.) Dr David Wild (Indiana
Univ.)Dear David and Christoph
I am writing ask you (as editors) about the Openness of data
published in J. Cheminformatics. Open data is now essential for
information-driven science and one of the important goals is to make
it clear to humans and machines which data are fully Open. The Open
Knowledge Foundation has produced a definition of Open Knowledge [1]
which in simple terms allows anyone to download, and re-use the data
for any legitimate purpose. The CC-BY license, which you use, is
automatically compatible with the Open definition but it would be
extremely helpful to have confirmation of that.Assuming you agree, as a further and culture-changing step we would
ask you to add "Open Data" buttons to the material you publish.
These would function technically in the same way as Open Access
buttons (which you already use) and link through to the OKF's Open
Definition [1]. This promotes the idea of Open Data and will allow
machines as well as humans to extract and index your data in the
confident knowledge that they have the authors' and journal's
blessing.Best
Peter Murray-Rust
[1] http://www.opendefinition.org/1.0/ [2] http://www.opendefinition.org/licenses/
--
Sent by "Is It Open Data?" (http://isitopen.ckan.net/about/) A service which helps scholars (and others) to request information about the status and licensing of information.
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