[open-science] feedback wanted on text-mining initiatives

Heather Piwowar hpiwowar at gmail.com
Sat Apr 21 15:39:07 UTC 2012


Great suggestions!  (sorry comments on the blog weren't working, not sure
why, will keep investigating.)

I met with UBC librarians yesterday.  They are excited about codifying
these expectations into a text-mining addendum that they can use as a model
agreement with all publishers.  They suggested I spearhead contacting other
publishers.  I'm going to be busy with that for the next little while.

Does anyone else want to pick up the statement and run with pulling
together these comments, driving to a community "short, tight, non-nonsense
manifesto"?

Heather


On Fri, Apr 20, 2012 at 9:52 AM, Peter Murray-Rust <pm286 at cam.ac.uk> wrote:

> Heather this is great,
> I tried to respond to your blog but could. so please publish this as if I
> had.
>
> "This is a great idea, Heather. It is important to state what we want and
> what we believe we have a right to, not just what we can 'negotiate' or do
> without being sued. There are fundamental rights and we should aim for them.
>
> A finished manifesto will require some communal work. Firstly it must
> cover multiple jurisdictions (e.g. "fair use" is irrelevant in UK law, and
> in any case Larry Lessig simple describes it as a right to go to court (or
> similar).
>
> It's extremely important that we don't get so excited that we give away
> stuff that actually is ours. For example I will argue that *all* factual
> data is de facto mineable and is only prevented by publisher contracts. We
> should also address the problem (if any) of server overload - it is easily
> manageable by caches. I am particularly concerned about other-than-text -
> much of my current work is on diagrams.
>
> So a short, tight, non-nonsense manifesto is exactly what is required.
> Like Panton Principles and the Principles pf Open Bibliography.
>
> And we have a number of people in OKF who are very interested.
> "
>
> So as you say this is the time - we should aim to get something out as
> quickly as we can without losing the fundamental principles. That's not
> easy, but it's possible
>
> On Fri, Apr 20, 2012 at 5:33 PM, Nick Barnes <nb at climatecode.org> wrote:
>
>> On Fri, Apr 20, 2012 at 16:15, Heather Piwowar <hpiwowar at gmail.com>
>> wrote:
>> > Hi Open Science,
>> >
>> > There is growing interest in text-mining rights.  I'm in the middle of
>> a bit
>> > of it, and would love some feedback and community.
>> >
>> > Briefly, due to a twitter conversation, Elsevier and I began to talk
>> about
>> > updating the subscription contract of the University of British
>> Columbia to
>> > explicitly include text-mining rights.  The rights Elsevier has agreed
>> to
>> > are more broad than they've agreed to with other institutions, as far
>> as I
>> > know (tell me if I'm wrong!), and more broad than those of most
>> publishers.
>> >  More information.
>> >
>> > In the mean time, PMR and others are asserting text-mining rights and
>> going
>> > ahead.  This is another approach and I'm glad they are doing it.
>> >
>> > I've drafted a short "text-mining manifesto" if you will...  how
>> researchers
>> > expect to be able to access and process the accessing the literature to
>> > which we have access.   How to improve this statement, and what to do
>> with
>> > it next?
>>
>> Tried to respond on your blog but for some reason WordPress doesn't
>> like my login any more.  Anyway, I was commenting to encourage you to
>> broaden it.  For instance are "aggregate statistical" results the only
>> kind of fact that text-miners might want to publish?  Also, to
>> strengthen the wording.  It took me several drafts of the Science Code
>> Manifesto to get to the bald statements of "must".
>> --
>> Nick Barnes, Climate Code Foundation, http://climatecode.org/
>>
>> _______________________________________________
>> open-science mailing list
>> open-science at lists.okfn.org
>> http://lists.okfn.org/mailman/listinfo/open-science
>>
>
>
>
> --
> Peter Murray-Rust
> Reader in Molecular Informatics
> Unilever Centre, Dep. Of Chemistry
> University of Cambridge
> CB2 1EW, UK
> +44-1223-763069
>
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