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Wikipedia

Open data

Open data is data that is openly accessible, exploitable, editable and shared by anyone for any purpose. Open data is licensed under an open license.[1][2][3]

Open data map
Linked open data cloud in August 2014
Clear labelling of the licensing terms is a key component of open data, and icons like the one pictured here are being used for that purpose.

The goals of the open data movement are similar to those of other "open(-source)" movements such as open-source software, hardware, open content, open specifications, open education, open educational resources, open government, open knowledge, open access, open science, and the open web. The growth of the open data movement is paralleled by a rise in intellectual property rights.[4] The philosophy behind open data has been long established (for example in the Mertonian tradition of science), but the term "open data" itself is recent, gaining popularity with the rise of the Internet and World Wide Web and, especially, with the launch of open-data government initiatives such as Data.gov, Data.gov.uk and Data.gov.in.

Open data can be linked data - referred to as linked open data.

One of the most important forms of open data is open government data (OGD), which is a form of open data created by ruling government institutions. Open government data's importance is born from it being a part of citizens' everyday lives, down to the most routine/mundane tasks that are seemingly far removed from government.

The abbreviation FAIR/O data is sometimes used to indicate that the dataset or database in question complies with the principles of FAIR data and carries an explicit data‑capable open license.

Overview

The concept of open data is not new, but a formalized definition is relatively new. Open data as a phenomenon denotes that governmental data should be available to anyone with a possibility of redistribution in any form without any copyright restriction.[5] One more definition is the Open Definition which can be summarized as "a piece of data is open if anyone is free to use, reuse, and redistribute it – subject only, at most, to the requirement to attribute and/or share-alike."[6] Other definitions, including the Open Data Institute's "open data is data that anyone can access, use or share," have an accessible short version of the definition but refer to the formal definition.[7] Open data may include non-textual material such as maps, genomes, connectomes, chemical compounds, mathematical and scientific formulae, medical data, and practice, bioscience and biodiversity.

A major barrier to the open data movement is the commercial value of data. Access to, or re-use of, data is often controlled by public or private organizations. Control may be through access restrictions, licenses, copyright, patents and charges for access or re-use. Advocates of open data argue that these restrictions detract from the common good and that data should be available without restrictions or fees.

Creators of data do not consider the need to state the conditions of ownership, licensing and re-use; instead presuming that not asserting copyright enters the data into the public domain. For example, many scientists do not consider the data published with their work to be theirs to control and consider the act of publication in a journal to be an implicit release of data into the commons. The lack of a license makes it difficult to determine the status of a data set and may restrict the use of data offered in an "Open" spirit. Because of this uncertainty it is possible for public or private organizations to aggregate said data, claim that it is protected by copyright, and then resell it.

The issue of indigenous knowledge (IK) poses a great challenge in terms of capturing, storage and distribution. Many societies in third-world countries lack the technicality processes of managing the IK.

At his presentation at the XML 2005 conference, Connolly[8] displayed these two quotations regarding open data:

  • "I want my data back." (Jon Bosak circa 1997)[citation needed]
  • "I've long believed that customers of any application own the data they enter into it."[9] (This quote refers to Veen's own heart-rate data.)

Major sources

 
The State of Open Data, a 2019 book from African Minds

Open data can come from any source. This section lists some of the fields that publish (or at least discuss publishing) a large amount of open data.

In science

The concept of open access to scientific data was established with the formation of the World Data Center system, in preparation for the International Geophysical Year of 1957–1958.[10] The International Council of Scientific Unions (now the International Council for Science) oversees several World Data Centres with the mission to minimize the risk of data loss and to maximize data accessibility.[11]

While the open-science-data movement long predates the Internet, the availability of fast, readily available networking has significantly changed the context of Open science data, as publishing or obtaining data has become much less expensive and time-consuming.[12]

The Human Genome Project was a major initiative that exemplified the power of open data. It was built upon the so-called Bermuda Principles, stipulating that: "All human genomic sequence information … should be freely available and in the public domain in order to encourage research and development and to maximize its benefit to society".[13] More recent initiatives such as the Structural Genomics Consortium have illustrated that the open data approach can be used productively within the context of industrial R&D.[14]

In 2004, the Science Ministers of all nations of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), which includes most developed countries of the world, signed a declaration which states that all publicly funded archive data should be made publicly available.[15] Following a request and an intense discussion with data-producing institutions in member states, the OECD published in 2007 the OECD Principles and Guidelines for Access to Research Data from Public Funding as a soft-law recommendation.[16]

Examples of open data in science:

  • data.uni-muenster.de – Open data about scientific artifacts from the University of Muenster, Germany. Launched in 2011.
  • Dataverse Network Project – archival repository software promoting data sharing, persistent data citation, and reproducible research.[17]
  • linkedscience.org/data – Open scientific datasets encoded as Linked Data. Launched in 2011, ended 2018.[18][19]
  • systemanaturae.org – Open scientific datasets related to wildlife classified by animal species. Launched in 2015.[20]

In government

There are a range of different arguments for government open data.[21][22] Some advocates say that making government information available to the public as machine readable open data can facilitate government transparency, accountability and public participation. "Open data can be a powerful force for public accountability—it can make existing information easier to analyze, process, and combine than ever before, allowing a new level of public scrutiny."[23] Governments that enable public viewing of data can help citizens engage within the governmental sectors and "add value to that data."[24] Open data experts have nuanced the impact that opening government data may have on government transparency and accountability. In a widely cited paper, scholars David Robinson and Harlan Yu contend that governments may project a veneer of transparency by publishing machine-readable data that does not actually make government more transparent or accountable.[25] Drawing from earlier studies on transparency and anticorruption,[26] World Bank political scientist Tiago C. Peixoto extended Yu and Robinson’s argument by highlighting a minimal chain of events necessary for open data to lead to accountability:

  1. relevant data is disclosed;
  2. the data is widely disseminated and understood by the public;
  3. the public reacts to the content of the data; and
  4. public officials either respond to the public’s reaction or are sanctioned by the public through institutional means.[27]

Some make the case that opening up official information can support technological innovation and economic growth by enabling third parties to develop new kinds of digital applications and services.[28]

Several national governments have created websites to distribute a portion of the data they collect. It is a concept for a collaborative project in the municipal Government to create and organize culture for Open Data or Open government data.

Additionally, other levels of government have established open data websites. There are many government entities pursuing Open Data in Canada. Data.gov lists the sites of a total of 40 US states and 46 US cities and counties with websites to provide open data, e.g., the state of Maryland, the state of California, US[29] and New York City.[30]

At the international level, the United Nations has an open data website that publishes statistical data from member states and UN agencies,[31] and the World Bank published a range of statistical data relating to developing countries.[32] The European Commission has created two portals for the European Union: the EU Open Data Portal which gives access to open data from the EU institutions, agencies and other bodies[33] and the European Data Portal that provides datasets from local, regional and national public bodies across Europe.[34] The two portals were consolidated to data.europa.eu on April 21, 2021.

Italy is the first country to release standard processes and guidelines under a Creative Commons license for spread usage in the Public Administration. The open model is called the Open Data Management Cycle[35] and was adopted in several regions such as Veneto[36] and Umbria[37] Main cities like Reggio Calabria[38] and Genova have adopted this model.[39]

In October 2015, the Open Government Partnership launched the International Open Data Charter, a set of principles and best practices for the release of governmental open data formally adopted by seventeen governments of countries, states and cities during the OGP Global Summit in Mexico.[40]

In non-profit organizations

Many non-profit organizations offer open access to their data, as long it does not undermine their users', members' or third party's privacy rights. In comparison to for-profit corporations, they do not seek to monetize their data. OpenNWT launched a website offering open data of elections.[41] CIAT offers open data to anybody who is willing to conduct big data analytics in order to enhance the benefit of international agricultural research.[42] DBLP, which is owned by a non-profit organization Dagstuhl, offers its database of scientific publications from computer science as open data.[43] Non-profit hospitality exchange services offer trustworthy teams of scientists access to their anonymized data for publication of insights to the benefit of humanity. Open Icecat provides product data-sheets and e-commerce usage statistics as open data. Before becoming a for-profit corporation in 2011, Couchsurfing offered 4 research teams access to its social networking data.[44][45][46][47] In 2015, non-profit hospitality exchange services Bewelcome and Warm Showers provided their data for public research.[48][49]

Policies and strategies

At a small level, a business or research organization's policies and strategies towards open data will vary, sometimes greatly. One common strategy employed is the use of a data commons. A data commons is an interoperable software and hardware platform that aggregates (or collocates) data, data infrastructure, and data-producing and data-managing applications in order to better allow a community of users to manage, analyze, and share their data with others over both short- and long-term timelines.[50][51][52] Ideally, this interoperable cyberinfrastructure should be robust enough "to facilitate transitions between stages in the life cycle of a collection" of data and information resources[50] while still being driven by common data models and workspace tools enabling and supporting robust data analysis.[52] The policies and strategies underlying a data commons will ideally involve numerous stakeholders, including the data commons service provider, data contributors, and data users.[51]

Grossman et al[51] suggests six major considerations for a data commons strategy that better enables open data in businesses and research organizations. Such a strategy should address the need for:

  • permanent, persistent digital IDs, which enable access controls for datasets;
  • permanent, discoverable metadata associated with each digital ID;
  • application programming interface (API)-based access, tied to an authentication and authorization service;
  • data portability;
  • data "peering," without access, egress, and ingress charges; and
  • a rationed approach to users computing data over the data commons.

Beyond individual businesses and research centers, and at a more macro level, countries like Germany[53] have launched their own official nationwide open data strategies, detailing how data management systems and data commons should be developed, used, and maintained for the greater public good.

Arguments for and against

Opening government data is only a waypoint on the road to improving education, improving government, and building tools to solve other real-world problems. While many arguments have been made categorically[citation needed], the following discussion of arguments for and against open data highlights that these arguments often depend highly on the type of data and its potential uses.

Arguments made on behalf of open data include the following:

  • "Data belongs to the human race". Typical examples are genomes, data on organisms, medical science, environmental data following the Aarhus Convention.
  • Public money was used to fund the work, and so it should be universally available.[54]
  • It was created by or at a government institution (this is common in US National Laboratories and government agencies).
  • Facts cannot legally be copyrighted.
  • Sponsors of research do not get full value unless the resulting data are freely available.
  • Restrictions on data re-use create an anticommons.
  • Data are required for the smooth process of running communal human activities and are an important enabler of socio-economic development (health care, education, economic productivity, etc.).[55]
  • In scientific research, the rate of discovery is accelerated by better access to data.[56]
  • Making data open helps combat "data rot" and ensure that scientific research data are preserved over time.[57][58]
  • Statistical literacy benefits from open data. Instructors can use locally relevant data sets to teach statistical concepts to their students.[59][60]

It is generally held that factual data cannot be copyrighted.[61] Publishers frequently add copyright statements (often forbidding re-use) to scientific data accompanying publications. It may be unclear whether the factual data embedded in full text are part of the copyright.

While the human abstraction of facts from paper publications is normally accepted as legal there is often an implied restriction on the machine extraction by robots.

Unlike open access, where groups of publishers have stated their concerns, open data is normally challenged by individual institutions.[citation needed] Their arguments have been discussed less in public discourse and there are fewer quotes to rely on at this time.

Arguments against making all data available as open data include the following:

  • Government funding may not be used to duplicate or challenge the activities of the private sector (e.g. PubChem).
  • Governments have to be accountable for the efficient use of taxpayer's money: If public funds are used to aggregate the data and if the data will bring commercial (private) benefits to only a small number of users, the users should reimburse governments for the cost of providing the data.
  • Open data may lead to exploitation of, and rapid publication of results based on, data pertaining to developing countries by rich and well-equipped research institutes, without any further involvement and/or benefit to local communities (helicopter research); similarly, to the historical open access to tropical forests that has led to the misappropriation ("Global Pillage") of plant genetic resources from developing countries.[62]
  • The revenue earned by publishing data can be used to cover the costs of generating and/or disseminating the data, so that the dissemination can continue indefinitely.
  • The revenue earned by publishing data permits non-profit organizations to fund other activities (e.g. learned society publishing supports the society).
  • The government gives specific legitimacy for certain organizations to recover costs (NIST in US, Ordnance Survey in UK).
  • Privacy concerns may require that access to data is limited to specific users or to sub-sets of the data.[63]
  • Collecting, 'cleaning', managing and disseminating data are typically labour- and/or cost-intensive processes – whoever provides these services should receive fair remuneration for providing those services.
  • Sponsors do not get full value unless their data is used appropriately – sometimes this requires quality management, dissemination and branding efforts that can best be achieved by charging fees to users.
  • Often, targeted end-users cannot use the data without additional processing (analysis, apps etc.) – if anyone has access to the data, none may have an incentive to invest in the processing required to make data useful (typical examples include biological, medical, and environmental data).
  • There is no control to the secondary use (aggregation) of open data.[64]

Relation to other open activities

The goals of the Open Data movement are similar to those of other "Open" movements.

  • Open access is concerned with making scholarly publications freely available on the internet. In some cases, these articles include open datasets as well.
  • Open specifications are documents describing file types or protocols, where the documents are openly licensed. These specifications are primarily meant to improve different software handling the same file types or protocols, but monopolists forced by law into open specifications might make it more difficult.
  • Open content is concerned with making resources aimed at a human audience (such as prose, photos, or videos) freely available.
  • Open knowledge. Open Knowledge International argues for openness in a range of issues including, but not limited to, those of open data. It covers (a) scientific, historical, geographic or otherwise (b) Content such as music, films, books (c) Government and other administrative information. Open data is included within the scope of the Open Knowledge Definition, which is alluded to in Science Commons' Protocol for Implementing Open Access Data.[65]
  • Open notebook science refers to the application of the Open Data concept to as much of the scientific process as possible, including failed experiments and raw experimental data.[66]
  • Open-source software is concerned with the open-source licenses under which computer programs can be distributed and is not normally concerned primarily with data.
  • Open educational resources are freely accessible, openly licensed documents and media that are useful for teaching, learning, and assessing as well as for research purposes.
  • Open research/open science/open science data (linked open science) means an approach to open and interconnect scientific assets like data, methods and tools with linked data techniques to enable transparent, reproducible and interdisciplinary research.[67]
  • Open-GLAM (Galleries, Library, Archives, and Museums)[68] is an initiative and network that supports exchange and collaboration between cultural institutions that support open access to their digitalized collections. The GLAM-Wiki Initiative helps cultural institutions share their openly licensed resources with the world through collaborative projects with experienced Wikipedia editors. Open Heritage Data is associated with Open GLAM, as openly licensed data in the heritage sector is now frequently used in research, publishing, and programming,[69] particularly in the Digital Humanities.

Open Data as commons

Ideas and definitions

Formally both the definition of Open Data and commons revolve around the concept of shared resources with a low barrier to access. Substantially, digital commons include Open Data in that it includes resources maintained online, such as data.[70] Overall, looking at operational principles of Open Data one could see the overlap between Open Data and (digital) commons in practice. Principles of Open Data are sometimes distinct depending on the type of data under scrutiny.[71] Nonetheless, they are somewhat overlapping and their key rationale is the lack of barriers to the re-use of data(sets).[71] Regardless of their origin, principles across types of Open Data hint at the key elements of the definition of commons. These are, for instance, accessibility, re-use, findability, non-proprietarily.[71] Additionally, although to a lower extent, threats and opportunities associated with both Open Data and commons are similar. Synthesizing, they revolve around (risks and) benefits associated with (uncontrolled) use of common resources by a large variety of actors.

The System

Both commons and Open Data can be defined by the features of the resources that fit under these concepts, but they can be defined by the characteristics of the systems their advocates push for. Governance is a focus for both Open Data and commons scholars.[71][70] The key elements that outline commons and Open Data peculiarities are the differences (and maybe opposition) to the dominant market logics as shaped by capitalism.[70] Perhaps it is this feature that emerges in the recent surge of the concept of commons as related to a more social look at digital technologies in the specific forms of digital and, especially, data commons.

Real-life case

An exemplification of how the relationship between Open Data and commons and how their governance can potentially disrupt the market logic otherwise dominating big data is a project conducted by Human Ecosystem Relazioni in Bologna (Italy). See: https://www.he-r.it/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/HUB-report-impaginato_v1_small.pdf.

This project aimed at extrapolating and identifying online social relations surrounding “collaboration” in Bologna. Data was collected from social networks and online platforms for citizens collaboration. Eventually data was analyzed for the content, meaning, location, timeframe, and other variables. Overall, online social relations for collaboration were analyzed based on network theory. The resulting dataset have been made available online as Open Data (aggregated and anonymized); nonetheless, individuals can reclaim all their data. This has been done with the idea of making data into a commons. This project exemplifies the relationship between Open Data and commons, and how they can disrupt the market logic driving big data use in two ways. First, it shows how such projects, following the rationale of Open Data somewhat can trigger the creation of effective data commons. The project itself was offering different types of support to social network platform users to have contents removed. Second, opening data regarding online social networks interactions has the potential to significantly reduce the monopolistic power of social network platforms on those data.

Funders' mandates

Several funding bodies which mandate Open Access mandate Open Data. A good expression of requirements (truncated in places) is given by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR):[72]

  • to deposit bioinformatics, atomic and molecular coordinate data, experimental data into the appropriate public database immediately upon publication of research results.
  • to retain original data sets for a minimum of five years after the grant. This applies to all data, whether published or not.

Other bodies active in promoting the deposition of data as well as full text include the Wellcome Trust. An academic paper published in 2013 advocated that Horizon 2020 (the science funding mechanism of the EU) should mandate that funded projects hand in their databases as "deliverables" at the end of the project, so that they can be checked for third party usability then shared.[73]

Non-open data

Several mechanisms restrict access to or reuse of data (and several reasons for doing this are given above). They include:

  • making data available for a charge;
  • compilation in databases or websites to which only registered members or customers can have access;
  • use of a proprietary or closed technology or encryption which creates a barrier for access;
  • copyright statements claiming to forbid (or obfuscating) re-use of the data, including the use of "no derivatives" requirements;
  • patent forbidding re-use of the data (for example the 3-dimensional coordinates of some experimental protein structures have been patented);
  • restriction of robots to websites, with preference to certain search engines;
  • aggregating factual data into "databases" which may be covered by "database rights" or "database directives" (e.g. Directive on the legal protection of databases);
  • time-limited access to resources such as e-journals (which on traditional print were available to the purchaser indefinitely);
  • "webstacles", or the provision of single data points as opposed to tabular queries or bulk downloads of data sets; and
  • political, commercial or legal pressure on the activity of organisations providing Open Data (for example the American Chemical Society lobbied the US Congress to limit funding to the National Institutes of Health for its Open PubChem data).[74]

See also

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External links

open, data, data, that, openly, accessible, exploitable, editable, shared, anyone, purpose, licensed, under, open, license, linked, open, data, cloud, august, 2014, clear, labelling, licensing, terms, component, open, data, icons, like, pictured, here, being, . Open data is data that is openly accessible exploitable editable and shared by anyone for any purpose Open data is licensed under an open license 1 2 3 Open data map Linked open data cloud in August 2014 Clear labelling of the licensing terms is a key component of open data and icons like the one pictured here are being used for that purpose The goals of the open data movement are similar to those of other open source movements such as open source software hardware open content open specifications open education open educational resources open government open knowledge open access open science and the open web The growth of the open data movement is paralleled by a rise in intellectual property rights 4 The philosophy behind open data has been long established for example in the Mertonian tradition of science but the term open data itself is recent gaining popularity with the rise of the Internet and World Wide Web and especially with the launch of open data government initiatives such as Data gov Data gov uk and Data gov in Open data can be linked data referred to as linked open data One of the most important forms of open data is open government data OGD which is a form of open data created by ruling government institutions Open government data s importance is born from it being a part of citizens everyday lives down to the most routine mundane tasks that are seemingly far removed from government The abbreviation FAIR O data is sometimes used to indicate that the dataset or database in question complies with the principles of FAIR data and carries an explicit data capable open license Contents 1 Overview 2 Major sources 2 1 In science 2 2 In government 2 3 In non profit organizations 3 Policies and strategies 4 Arguments for and against 5 Relation to other open activities 6 Open Data as commons 6 1 Ideas and definitions 6 2 The System 6 3 Real life case 7 Funders mandates 8 Non open data 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksOverview EditThe concept of open data is not new but a formalized definition is relatively new Open data as a phenomenon denotes that governmental data should be available to anyone with a possibility of redistribution in any form without any copyright restriction 5 One more definition is the Open Definition which can be summarized as a piece of data is open if anyone is free to use reuse and redistribute it subject only at most to the requirement to attribute and or share alike 6 Other definitions including the Open Data Institute s open data is data that anyone can access use or share have an accessible short version of the definition but refer to the formal definition 7 Open data may include non textual material such as maps genomes connectomes chemical compounds mathematical and scientific formulae medical data and practice bioscience and biodiversity A major barrier to the open data movement is the commercial value of data Access to or re use of data is often controlled by public or private organizations Control may be through access restrictions licenses copyright patents and charges for access or re use Advocates of open data argue that these restrictions detract from the common good and that data should be available without restrictions or fees Creators of data do not consider the need to state the conditions of ownership licensing and re use instead presuming that not asserting copyright enters the data into the public domain For example many scientists do not consider the data published with their work to be theirs to control and consider the act of publication in a journal to be an implicit release of data into the commons The lack of a license makes it difficult to determine the status of a data set and may restrict the use of data offered in an Open spirit Because of this uncertainty it is possible for public or private organizations to aggregate said data claim that it is protected by copyright and then resell it The issue of indigenous knowledge IK poses a great challenge in terms of capturing storage and distribution Many societies in third world countries lack the technicality processes of managing the IK At his presentation at the XML 2005 conference Connolly 8 displayed these two quotations regarding open data I want my data back Jon Bosak circa 1997 citation needed I ve long believed that customers of any application own the data they enter into it 9 This quote refers to Veen s own heart rate data Major sources Edit The State of Open Data a 2019 book from African Minds Open data can come from any source This section lists some of the fields that publish or at least discuss publishing a large amount of open data In science Edit Main article Open science data The concept of open access to scientific data was established with the formation of the World Data Center system in preparation for the International Geophysical Year of 1957 1958 10 The International Council of Scientific Unions now the International Council for Science oversees several World Data Centres with the mission to minimize the risk of data loss and to maximize data accessibility 11 While the open science data movement long predates the Internet the availability of fast readily available networking has significantly changed the context of Open science data as publishing or obtaining data has become much less expensive and time consuming 12 The Human Genome Project was a major initiative that exemplified the power of open data It was built upon the so called Bermuda Principles stipulating that All human genomic sequence information should be freely available and in the public domain in order to encourage research and development and to maximize its benefit to society 13 More recent initiatives such as the Structural Genomics Consortium have illustrated that the open data approach can be used productively within the context of industrial R amp D 14 In 2004 the Science Ministers of all nations of the Organisation for Economic Co operation and Development OECD which includes most developed countries of the world signed a declaration which states that all publicly funded archive data should be made publicly available 15 Following a request and an intense discussion with data producing institutions in member states the OECD published in 2007 the OECD Principles and Guidelines for Access to Research Data from Public Funding as a soft law recommendation 16 Examples of open data in science data uni muenster de Open data about scientific artifacts from the University of Muenster Germany Launched in 2011 Dataverse Network Project archival repository software promoting data sharing persistent data citation and reproducible research 17 linkedscience org data Open scientific datasets encoded as Linked Data Launched in 2011 ended 2018 18 19 systemanaturae org Open scientific datasets related to wildlife classified by animal species Launched in 2015 20 In government Edit See also Open government and PSI DirectiveThere are a range of different arguments for government open data 21 22 Some advocates say that making government information available to the public as machine readable open data can facilitate government transparency accountability and public participation Open data can be a powerful force for public accountability it can make existing information easier to analyze process and combine than ever before allowing a new level of public scrutiny 23 Governments that enable public viewing of data can help citizens engage within the governmental sectors and add value to that data 24 Open data experts have nuanced the impact that opening government data may have on government transparency and accountability In a widely cited paper scholars David Robinson and Harlan Yu contend that governments may project a veneer of transparency by publishing machine readable data that does not actually make government more transparent or accountable 25 Drawing from earlier studies on transparency and anticorruption 26 World Bank political scientist Tiago C Peixoto extended Yu and Robinson s argument by highlighting a minimal chain of events necessary for open data to lead to accountability relevant data is disclosed the data is widely disseminated and understood by the public the public reacts to the content of the data and public officials either respond to the public s reaction or are sanctioned by the public through institutional means 27 Some make the case that opening up official information can support technological innovation and economic growth by enabling third parties to develop new kinds of digital applications and services 28 Several national governments have created websites to distribute a portion of the data they collect It is a concept for a collaborative project in the municipal Government to create and organize culture for Open Data or Open government data Additionally other levels of government have established open data websites There are many government entities pursuing Open Data in Canada Data gov lists the sites of a total of 40 US states and 46 US cities and counties with websites to provide open data e g the state of Maryland the state of California US 29 and New York City 30 At the international level the United Nations has an open data website that publishes statistical data from member states and UN agencies 31 and the World Bank published a range of statistical data relating to developing countries 32 The European Commission has created two portals for the European Union the EU Open Data Portal which gives access to open data from the EU institutions agencies and other bodies 33 and the European Data Portal that provides datasets from local regional and national public bodies across Europe 34 The two portals were consolidated to data europa eu on April 21 2021 Italy is the first country to release standard processes and guidelines under a Creative Commons license for spread usage in the Public Administration The open model is called the Open Data Management Cycle 35 and was adopted in several regions such as Veneto 36 and Umbria 37 Main cities like Reggio Calabria 38 and Genova have adopted this model 39 In October 2015 the Open Government Partnership launched the International Open Data Charter a set of principles and best practices for the release of governmental open data formally adopted by seventeen governments of countries states and cities during the OGP Global Summit in Mexico 40 In non profit organizations Edit Many non profit organizations offer open access to their data as long it does not undermine their users members or third party s privacy rights In comparison to for profit corporations they do not seek to monetize their data OpenNWT launched a website offering open data of elections 41 CIAT offers open data to anybody who is willing to conduct big data analytics in order to enhance the benefit of international agricultural research 42 DBLP which is owned by a non profit organization Dagstuhl offers its database of scientific publications from computer science as open data 43 Non profit hospitality exchange services offer trustworthy teams of scientists access to their anonymized data for publication of insights to the benefit of humanity Open Icecat provides product data sheets and e commerce usage statistics as open data Before becoming a for profit corporation in 2011 Couchsurfing offered 4 research teams access to its social networking data 44 45 46 47 In 2015 non profit hospitality exchange services Bewelcome and Warm Showers provided their data for public research 48 49 Policies and strategies EditAt a small level a business or research organization s policies and strategies towards open data will vary sometimes greatly One common strategy employed is the use of a data commons A data commons is an interoperable software and hardware platform that aggregates or collocates data data infrastructure and data producing and data managing applications in order to better allow a community of users to manage analyze and share their data with others over both short and long term timelines 50 51 52 Ideally this interoperable cyberinfrastructure should be robust enough to facilitate transitions between stages in the life cycle of a collection of data and information resources 50 while still being driven by common data models and workspace tools enabling and supporting robust data analysis 52 The policies and strategies underlying a data commons will ideally involve numerous stakeholders including the data commons service provider data contributors and data users 51 Grossman et al 51 suggests six major considerations for a data commons strategy that better enables open data in businesses and research organizations Such a strategy should address the need for permanent persistent digital IDs which enable access controls for datasets permanent discoverable metadata associated with each digital ID application programming interface API based access tied to an authentication and authorization service data portability data peering without access egress and ingress charges and a rationed approach to users computing data over the data commons Beyond individual businesses and research centers and at a more macro level countries like Germany 53 have launched their own official nationwide open data strategies detailing how data management systems and data commons should be developed used and maintained for the greater public good Arguments for and against EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2011 Learn how and when to remove this template message Opening government data is only a waypoint on the road to improving education improving government and building tools to solve other real world problems While many arguments have been made categorically citation needed the following discussion of arguments for and against open data highlights that these arguments often depend highly on the type of data and its potential uses Arguments made on behalf of open data include the following Data belongs to the human race Typical examples are genomes data on organisms medical science environmental data following the Aarhus Convention Public money was used to fund the work and so it should be universally available 54 It was created by or at a government institution this is common in US National Laboratories and government agencies Facts cannot legally be copyrighted Sponsors of research do not get full value unless the resulting data are freely available Restrictions on data re use create an anticommons Data are required for the smooth process of running communal human activities and are an important enabler of socio economic development health care education economic productivity etc 55 In scientific research the rate of discovery is accelerated by better access to data 56 Making data open helps combat data rot and ensure that scientific research data are preserved over time 57 58 Statistical literacy benefits from open data Instructors can use locally relevant data sets to teach statistical concepts to their students 59 60 It is generally held that factual data cannot be copyrighted 61 Publishers frequently add copyright statements often forbidding re use to scientific data accompanying publications It may be unclear whether the factual data embedded in full text are part of the copyright While the human abstraction of facts from paper publications is normally accepted as legal there is often an implied restriction on the machine extraction by robots Unlike open access where groups of publishers have stated their concerns open data is normally challenged by individual institutions citation needed Their arguments have been discussed less in public discourse and there are fewer quotes to rely on at this time Arguments against making all data available as open data include the following Government funding may not be used to duplicate or challenge the activities of the private sector e g PubChem Governments have to be accountable for the efficient use of taxpayer s money If public funds are used to aggregate the data and if the data will bring commercial private benefits to only a small number of users the users should reimburse governments for the cost of providing the data Open data may lead to exploitation of and rapid publication of results based on data pertaining to developing countries by rich and well equipped research institutes without any further involvement and or benefit to local communities helicopter research similarly to the historical open access to tropical forests that has led to the misappropriation Global Pillage of plant genetic resources from developing countries 62 The revenue earned by publishing data can be used to cover the costs of generating and or disseminating the data so that the dissemination can continue indefinitely The revenue earned by publishing data permits non profit organizations to fund other activities e g learned society publishing supports the society The government gives specific legitimacy for certain organizations to recover costs NIST in US Ordnance Survey in UK Privacy concerns may require that access to data is limited to specific users or to sub sets of the data 63 Collecting cleaning managing and disseminating data are typically labour and or cost intensive processes whoever provides these services should receive fair remuneration for providing those services Sponsors do not get full value unless their data is used appropriately sometimes this requires quality management dissemination and branding efforts that can best be achieved by charging fees to users Often targeted end users cannot use the data without additional processing analysis apps etc if anyone has access to the data none may have an incentive to invest in the processing required to make data useful typical examples include biological medical and environmental data There is no control to the secondary use aggregation of open data 64 Relation to other open activities EditThe goals of the Open Data movement are similar to those of other Open movements Open access is concerned with making scholarly publications freely available on the internet In some cases these articles include open datasets as well Open specifications are documents describing file types or protocols where the documents are openly licensed These specifications are primarily meant to improve different software handling the same file types or protocols but monopolists forced by law into open specifications might make it more difficult Open content is concerned with making resources aimed at a human audience such as prose photos or videos freely available Open knowledge Open Knowledge International argues for openness in a range of issues including but not limited to those of open data It covers a scientific historical geographic or otherwise b Content such as music films books c Government and other administrative information Open data is included within the scope of the Open Knowledge Definition which is alluded to in Science Commons Protocol for Implementing Open Access Data 65 Open notebook science refers to the application of the Open Data concept to as much of the scientific process as possible including failed experiments and raw experimental data 66 Open source software is concerned with the open source licenses under which computer programs can be distributed and is not normally concerned primarily with data Open educational resources are freely accessible openly licensed documents and media that are useful for teaching learning and assessing as well as for research purposes Open research open science open science data linked open science means an approach to open and interconnect scientific assets like data methods and tools with linked data techniques to enable transparent reproducible and interdisciplinary research 67 Open GLAM Galleries Library Archives and Museums 68 is an initiative and network that supports exchange and collaboration between cultural institutions that support open access to their digitalized collections The GLAM Wiki Initiative helps cultural institutions share their openly licensed resources with the world through collaborative projects with experienced Wikipedia editors Open Heritage Data is associated with Open GLAM as openly licensed data in the heritage sector is now frequently used in research publishing and programming 69 particularly in the Digital Humanities Open Data as commons EditIdeas and definitions Edit Formally both the definition of Open Data and commons revolve around the concept of shared resources with a low barrier to access Substantially digital commons include Open Data in that it includes resources maintained online such as data 70 Overall looking at operational principles of Open Data one could see the overlap between Open Data and digital commons in practice Principles of Open Data are sometimes distinct depending on the type of data under scrutiny 71 Nonetheless they are somewhat overlapping and their key rationale is the lack of barriers to the re use of data sets 71 Regardless of their origin principles across types of Open Data hint at the key elements of the definition of commons These are for instance accessibility re use findability non proprietarily 71 Additionally although to a lower extent threats and opportunities associated with both Open Data and commons are similar Synthesizing they revolve around risks and benefits associated with uncontrolled use of common resources by a large variety of actors The System Edit Both commons and Open Data can be defined by the features of the resources that fit under these concepts but they can be defined by the characteristics of the systems their advocates push for Governance is a focus for both Open Data and commons scholars 71 70 The key elements that outline commons and Open Data peculiarities are the differences and maybe opposition to the dominant market logics as shaped by capitalism 70 Perhaps it is this feature that emerges in the recent surge of the concept of commons as related to a more social look at digital technologies in the specific forms of digital and especially data commons Real life case Edit An exemplification of how the relationship between Open Data and commons and how their governance can potentially disrupt the market logic otherwise dominating big data is a project conducted by Human Ecosystem Relazioni in Bologna Italy See https www he r it wp content uploads 2017 01 HUB report impaginato v1 small pdf This project aimed at extrapolating and identifying online social relations surrounding collaboration in Bologna Data was collected from social networks and online platforms for citizens collaboration Eventually data was analyzed for the content meaning location timeframe and other variables Overall online social relations for collaboration were analyzed based on network theory The resulting dataset have been made available online as Open Data aggregated and anonymized nonetheless individuals can reclaim all their data This has been done with the idea of making data into a commons This project exemplifies the relationship between Open Data and commons and how they can disrupt the market logic driving big data use in two ways First it shows how such projects following the rationale of Open Data somewhat can trigger the creation of effective data commons The project itself was offering different types of support to social network platform users to have contents removed Second opening data regarding online social networks interactions has the potential to significantly reduce the monopolistic power of social network platforms on those data Funders mandates EditSeveral funding bodies which mandate Open Access mandate Open Data A good expression of requirements truncated in places is given by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research CIHR 72 to deposit bioinformatics atomic and molecular coordinate data experimental data into the appropriate public database immediately upon publication of research results to retain original data sets for a minimum of five years after the grant This applies to all data whether published or not Other bodies active in promoting the deposition of data as well as full text include the Wellcome Trust An academic paper published in 2013 advocated that Horizon 2020 the science funding mechanism of the EU should mandate that funded projects hand in their databases as deliverables at the end of the project so that they can be checked for third party usability then shared 73 Non open data EditSeveral mechanisms restrict access to or reuse of data and several reasons for doing this are given above They include making data available for a charge compilation in databases or websites to which only registered members or customers can have access use of a proprietary or closed technology or encryption which creates a barrier for access copyright statements claiming to forbid or obfuscating re use of the data including the use of no derivatives requirements patent forbidding re use of the data for example the 3 dimensional coordinates of some experimental protein structures have been patented restriction of robots to websites with preference to certain search engines aggregating factual data into databases which may be covered by database rights or database directives e g Directive on the legal protection of databases time limited access to resources such as e journals which on traditional print were available to the purchaser indefinitely webstacles or the provision of single data points as opposed to tabular queries or bulk downloads of data sets and political commercial or legal pressure on the activity of organisations providing Open Data for example the American Chemical Society lobbied the US Congress to limit funding to the National Institutes of Health for its Open PubChem data 74 See also EditList of open data Open knowledge Open content Openness Creative Commons license Data curation Data governance Data management Data publishing Data sharing Demand responsive transport Digital preservation FAIR data principles International Open Data Day Linked data and Linked open data Open catalogue Open energy system databases Open Icecat Urban informatics WikidataReferences Edit What is open okfn org Retrieved 22 March 2022 Open Definition 2 1 Open Definition Defining Open in Open Data Open Content and Open Knowledge opendefinition org Retrieved 22 March 2022 Auer S R Bizer C Kobilarov G Lehmann J Cyganiak R Ives Z 2007 DBpedia A Nucleus for a Web of Open Data The Semantic Web Lecture Notes in Computer Science Vol 4825 p 722 doi 10 1007 978 3 540 76298 0 52 ISBN 978 3 540 76297 3 S2CID 7278297 Kitchin Rob 2014 The Data Revolution London Sage p 49 ISBN 978 1 4462 8748 4 Kassen Maxat 1 October 2013 A promising phenomenon of open data A case study of the Chicago open data project Government Information Quarterly 30 4 508 513 doi 10 1016 j giq 2013 05 012 ISSN 0740 624X See Open Definition home page and the full Open Definition What is open data and why should we care The ODI Retrieved 1 September 2021 Connolly Dan 16 November 2005 Semantic Web Data Integration with hCalendar and GRDDL W3C Talks and Presentations Atlanta Georgia USA W3C p 2 Retrieved 2 May 2015 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Veen Jeffrey 2 November 2005 Polar Heart Rate Monitors Gimme my data A website by Jeffrey Veen Archived from the original on 17 July 2017 Retrieved 20 May 2007 Committee on Scientific Accomplishments of Earth Observations from Space National Research Council 2008 Earth Observations from Space The First 50 Years of Scientific Achievements The National Academies Press p 6 doi 10 17226 11991 ISBN 978 0 309 11095 2 Retrieved 24 November 2010 World Data System 27 September 2017 Data Sharing Principles www icsu wds org ICSU WDS International Council for Science World Data Service Retrieved 27 September 2017 Vuong Quan Hoang 12 December 2017 Open data open review and open dialogue in making social sciences plausible Nature Scientific Data Updates arXiv 1712 04801 Bibcode 2017arXiv171204801V Retrieved 30 June 2018 Human Genome Project 1996 Summary of Principles Agreed Upon at the First International Strategy Meeting on Human Genome Sequencing Bermuda 25 28 February 1996 Perkmann Markus Schildt Henri 2015 Open Data Partnerships between Firms and Universities The Role of Boundary Organizations Research Policy 44 5 1133 1143 doi 10 1016 j respol 2014 12 006 OECD Declaration on Open Access to publicly funded data Archived 20 April 2010 at the Wayback Machine OECD Principles and Guidelines for Access to Research Data from Public Funding Dataverse Network Project Archived from the original on 9 October 2014 Retrieved 10 October 2014 Data Linked Science 17 October 2012 Archived from the original on 17 October 2012 Retrieved 1 September 2021 Kauppinen Tomi de Espindola Giovanna Mira 2011 Linked Open Science Communicating Sharing and Evaluating Data Methods and Results for Executable Papers PDF International Conference on Computational Science ICCS 2011 Vol 4 Procedia Computer Science Home Wildlife DataSets Animal Population DataSets and Conservation Research Projects Surveys Systema Naturae Retrieved 1 September 2021 Gray Jonathan 3 September 2014 Towards a Genealogy of Open Data General Conference of the European Consortium for Political Research in Glasgow doi 10 2139 ssrn 2605828 SSRN 2605828 via SSRN Brito Jerry 21 October 2007 Hack Mash amp Peer Crowdsourcing Government Transparency Columbia Science amp Technology Law Review 9 119 doi 10 2139 SSRN 1023485 S2CID 109457712 SSRN 1023485 Yu Harlan Robinson David G 28 February 2012 The New Ambiguity of Open Government UCLA Law Review Discourse 59 doi 10 2139 ssrn 2012489 SSRN 2012489 via Social Science Research Network Robinson David G Yu Harlan Zeller William P Felten Edward W 1 January 2009 Government Data and the Invisible Hand Yale Journal of Law amp Technology Rochester NY 11 SSRN 1138083 via Social Science Research Network uclalaw 8 August 2012 The New Ambiguity of Open Government UCLA Law Review Retrieved 12 March 2022 Lindstedt Catharina Naurin Daniel June 2010 Transparency is not Enough Making Transparency Effective in Reducing Corruption International Political Science Review 31 3 301 322 doi 10 1177 0192512110377602 ISSN 0192 5121 S2CID 154948461 uclalaw 2 May 2013 The Uncertain Relationship Between Open Data and Accountability A Response to Yu and Robinson s The New Ambiguity of Open Government UCLA Law Review Retrieved 12 March 2022 The Economic Impact of Open Data Opportunities for value creation in Europe data europa eu data europa eu Retrieved 12 March 2022 California Open Data Portal data ca gov Retrieved 7 May 2019 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Data City of New York NYC Open NYC Open Data NYC OpenData Retrieved 7 May 2019 UNdata data un org Retrieved 7 May 2019 World Bank Open Data Data data worldbank org Retrieved 7 May 2019 Data europa eu Retrieved 7 May 2019 Home Open Data Portal data europa eu Retrieved 7 May 2019 Open Data Management Cycle Linee guida per l ecosistema regionale veneto dei dati aperti Open Data Modello Operativo Open Data MOOD Umbria Linee Guida per la Gestione Open Data Citta di Reggio Calabria Linee guida programmatiche della Citta Metropolitana di Genova PDF The Open Data Charter A Roadmap for Using a Global Resource The Huffington Post 27 October 2015 Retrieved 29 October 2015 Green Arthur C 17 September 2019 OpenNWT announces launch of new election information website My Yellowknife Now Oyuela Andrea Walmsley Thea Walla Katherine 30 December 2019 120 Organizations Creating a New Decade for Food Food Tank Retrieved 21 January 2020 dblp How can I download the whole dblp dataset dblp uni 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Century PDF National Science Foundation p 23 Retrieved 4 January 2022 a b c Grossman Robert L Heath Allison Murphy Mark Patterson Maria Wells Walt 2016 A Case for Data Commons Toward Data Science as a Service Computing in Science amp Engineering 18 5 10 20 arXiv 1604 02608 Bibcode 2016CSE 18e 10G doi 10 1109 MCSE 2016 92 ISSN 1521 9615 PMC 5636009 PMID 29033693 a b Grossman R L 23 April 2019 How Data Commons Can Support Open Science SageBionetworks Retrieved 4 January 2022 BMI 7 July 2021 Open Data Strategie der Bundesregierung BMI21030 Open data strategy of the German Federal Government BMI21030 PDF in German Berlin Germany Bundesministerium des Innern fur Bau und Heimat BMI Retrieved 26 July 2021 On the road to open data by Ian Manocha Archived from the original on 29 March 2012 Retrieved 12 August 2011 Big Data for Development From Information to Knowledge Societies Martin Hilbert 2013 SSRN Scholarly Paper No ID 2205145 Rochester NY Social Science Research Network https ssrn com abstract 2205145 How to Make the Dream Come True permanent dead link argues in one research area Astronomy that access to open data increases the rate of scientific discovery Khodiyar Varsha 19 May 2014 Stopping the rot ensuring continued access to scientific data irrespective of age F1000 Research F1000 Retrieved 11 March 2015 Magee AF May MR Moore BR 24 October 2014 The dawn of open access to phylogenetic data PLOS ONE 9 10 e110268 arXiv 1405 6623 Bibcode 2014PLoSO 9k0268M doi 10 1371 journal pone 0110268 PMC 4208793 PMID 25343725 Rivera Roberto Marazzi Mario Torres Pedro 19 June 2019 Incorporating Open Data Into Introductory Courses in Statistics Journal of Statistics Education Taylor and Francis 27 3 198 207 arXiv 1906 03762 doi 10 1080 10691898 2019 1669506 S2CID 182952595 Retrieved 7 May 2020 Rivera Roberto 5 February 2020 Principles of Managerial Statistics and Data Science Wiley ISBN 978 1119486411 Towards a Science Commons Archived 14 July 2014 at the Wayback Machine includes an overview of the basis of openness in science data Low A 2001 The Third Revolution Plant Genetic Resources in Developing Countries and China Global Village or Global Pillage Int l Trade amp Bus L Ann 323 Zuiderwijk Anneke Janssen Marijn 18 June 2014 The negative effects of open government data investigating the dark side of open data Proceedings of the 15th Annual International Conference on Digital Government Research dg o 14 New York NY USA Association for Computing Machinery 147 152 doi 10 1145 2612733 2612761 ISBN 978 1 4503 2901 9 S2CID 14440894 Sharif Naubahar Ritter Waltraut Davidson Robert L Edmunds Scott C 31 December 2018 An Open Science State of the Art for Hong Kong Making Open Research Data Available to Support Hong Kong Innovation Policy Journal of Contemporary Eastern Asia 17 2 200 221 doi 10 17477 JCEA 2018 17 2 200 Protocol for Implementing Open Access Data Archived from the original on 30 January 2017 Retrieved 17 April 2009 http drexel coas elearning blogspot com 2006 09 open notebook science html creation of term Kauppinen T Espindola G M D 2011 Linked Open Science Communicating Sharing and Evaluating Data Methods and Results for Executable Papers Procedia Computer Science 4 726 731 doi 10 1016 j procs 2011 04 076 Open GLAM Wikimedia Meta Wiki a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Henriette Roued 2020 Open Heritage Data An introduction to research publishing and programming with open data in the heritage sector Facet Publishing ISBN 978 1 78330 360 1 OL 29397859M Wikidata Q111293389 a b c Dulong de Rosnay Melanie Stalder Felix 17 December 2020 Digital commons Internet Policy Review 9 4 doi 10 14763 2020 4 1530 ISSN 2197 6775 S2CID 240800967 a b c d van Loenen Bastiaan Vancauwenberghe Glenn Crompvoets Joep Dalla Corte Lorenzo 2018 Open Data Exposed Information Technology and Law Series Vol 30 T M C Asser Press pp 1 10 doi 10 1007 978 94 6265 261 3 1 eISSN 2215 1966 ISBN 978 94 6265 260 6 ISSN 1570 2782 SPARC OpenData arl org Mailing List Archive Archived from the original on 16 July 2011 Retrieved 2 November 2006 Galsworthy M McKee M 2013 Galsworthy M J amp McKee M 2013 Europe s Horizon 2020 science funding programme How is it shaping up Journal of Health Services Research and Policy doi 10 1177 1355819613476017 Journal of Health Services Research amp Policy 18 3 182 185 doi 10 1177 1355819613476017 PMC 4107840 PMID 23595575 Archived from the original on 23 April 2013 Retrieved 24 April 2013 Review of history and positions by the University of California Archived from the original on 9 November 2006 Retrieved 31 October 2006 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Open data Scholia has a topic profile for Open data Open Data An Introduction from the Open Knowledge Foundation Video Archived 10 April 2011 at the Wayback Machine of Tim Berners Lee at TED conference 2009 calling for Raw Data Now Six minute Video Archived 6 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine of Tim Berners Lee at TED conference 2010 showing examples of open data G8 Open Data Charter Towards a Genealogy of Open Data research paper tracing different historical threads contributing to current conceptions of open data Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Open data amp oldid 1129710689, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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