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Wikimedia 2030: Together with Libraries to the Largest Knowledge Infrastructure in the World

Wikimedia 2030: Together with Libraries to the Largest Knowledge Infrastructure in the World

The international Wikimedia movement, best known for its community-based online encyclopaedia Wikipedia, marked its 15th anniversary by setting its sights on the year 2030 and defined strategies, values and goals in an open process. Wikimedia Germany’s Nicole Ebber and Holger Plickert have answered some questions about the transformation, how Wikimedia wants to become the largest knowledge infrastructure in the world and what connections they see to libraries.

The Two Cultures of Science: the Movement for Reproducibility and the Movement for Open Science

The Two Cultures of Science: the Movement for Reproducibility and the Movement for Open Science

In the world of scientific research today, there’s a revolution going on – over the last decade or so, scientists across many disciplines have been seeking to improve the workings of science and its methods. To do this, scientists are largely following one of two paths: the movement for reproducibility and the movement for open science. Both movements aim to create centralized archives for data, computer code and other resources, but from there, the paths diverge. 

The New Age of Preprints: Enhanced, Reproducible, and Reusable

The New Age of Preprints: Enhanced, Reproducible, and Reusable

Invest in Open Infrastructure receives initial funding to launch and hire a Director.

Why Figshare? Choosing a New Technical Infrastructure for 4TU.ResearchData

Why Figshare? Choosing a New Technical Infrastructure for 4TU.ResearchData

Written by Marta Teperek & Alastair Dunning 4TU.ResearchData is an international repository for research data in science, engineering and design. After over 10 years of using Fedora, an open so…

Open Science Saves Lives: Lessons from the COVID-19 Pandemic

Open Science Saves Lives: Lessons from the COVID-19 Pandemic

In the last decade Open Science principles, such as Open Access, study preregistration, use of preprints, making available data and code, and open peer review, have been successfully advocated for and are being slowly adopted in many different research communities. In response to the COVID-19 pandemic many publishers and researchers have sped up their adoption of some of these Open Science practices, sometimes embracing them fully and sometimes partially or in a sub-optimal manner. In this article, we express concerns about the violation of some of the Open Science principles and its potential impact on the quality of research output. We provide evidence of the misuses of these principles at different stages of the scientific process. We call for a wider adoption of Open Science practices in the hope that this work will encourage a broader endorsement of Open Science principles and serve as a reminder that science should always be a rigorous process, reliable and transparent, especially in the context of a pandemic where research findings are being translated into practice even more rapidly. We provide all data and scripts at . ### Competing Interest Statement The authors have declared no competing interest.

Developing Open Science in Africa: Barriers, Solutions and Opportunities

Developing Open Science in Africa: Barriers, Solutions and Opportunities

The paper argues for the development of open science in Africa as a means of energising national science systems and their roles in supporting public and private sectors and the general public.

Open Consultation for the EOSC Strategic Research and Innovation Agenda

Open Consultation for the EOSC Strategic Research and Innovation Agenda

The European Open Science Cloud (EOSC) is the envisioned federation of research (data) infrastructures that will enable the Web of FAIR Data and Services, help researchers to perform Open Science, and open up and exploit their data, publications and code.

Help Us Get to Know the Open Access Journals and Platforms That Are Free of Charge for Readers and Authors

Help Us Get to Know the Open Access Journals and Platforms That Are Free of Charge for Readers and Authors

We are pleased to invite you to fill in a survey dedicated to gaining in-depth understanding of open access journals that don’t charge author-fees, often known as the “diamond model”; journals that are free to both readers and authors. In addition, we are launching a crowdsourcing effort to list diamond journals not yet covered in major databases like DOAJ. 

Open Science Beyond Open Access: For and with Communities, A Step Towards the Decolonization of Knowledge

Open Science Beyond Open Access: For and with Communities, A Step Towards the Decolonization of Knowledge

UNESCO is launching international consultations aimed at developing a Recommendation on Open Science for adoption by member states in 2021. Its Recommendation will include a common definition, a shared set of values, and proposals for action. At the invitation of the Canadian Commission for UNESCO, this paper aims to contribute to the consultation process by answering questions such as: • Why and how should science be "open"? For and with whom? • Is it simply a matter of making scientific articles and data fully available to researchers around the world at the time of publication, so they do not miss important results that could contribute to or accelerate their work? • Could this openness also enable citizens around the world to contribute to science with their capacities and expertise, such as through citizen science or participatory action research projects? • Does science that is truly open include a plurality of ways of knowing, including those of Indigenous cultures, Global South cultures, and other excluded, marginalized groups in the Global North? The paper has four sections: "Open Science and the pandemic" introduces and explores different forms of openness during a crisis where science suddenly seems essential to the well-being of all. The next three sections explain the main dimensions of three forms of scientific openness: openness to publications and data, openness to society, and openness to excluded knowledges2 and epistemologies3. We conclude with policy considerations. A French version of this paper is available here: https://zenodo.org/record/3947013#.Xw-Ksx17nOQ

Open Metrics Require Open Infrastructure

Open Metrics Require Open Infrastructure

Today, remove the altmetrics.com badges from their landing pages-and we couldn't be more energized by their commitment to open infrastruct…

Open Knowledge Foundation Seeks Visionary Leader to Steer the World Towards a Free, Fair, and Open Society

Open Knowledge Foundation Seeks Visionary Leader to Steer the World Towards a Free, Fair, and Open Society

The process of recruiting a new CEO will commence over the next few weeks. An open future has never been more important – will you join us to create it?

Open Economics: Study on Open Science Principles and Practice in Economics

Open Economics: Study on Open Science Principles and Practice in Economics

There is wide agreement with the principles of Open Science in economics. This is shown by a ZBW study. However, there is still room for development regarding the implementation of Open Science on a b

The Anatomy of A Decentralized Online Festival

The Anatomy of A Decentralized Online Festival

The Open Publishing Fest, held over two weeks in May 2020, was a great success with over 150 events from all over the world and a huge variety of topics. The fest really brought people together and injected some charm into the communities life at an otherwise bleak time. With this in mind here ar

Sharing Openly Licensed Content on Social Media: A Conversation with GLAM - Creative Commons

Sharing Openly Licensed Content on Social Media: A Conversation with GLAM - Creative Commons

From solving attribution issues to understanding terms of service, here are some welcomed tips from Europeana, the Getty Museum, and Newfields.