[open-science] OKFN Open Science Mailing List will close on 31 Jan 2020 - where to next?

Tom Morris tfmorris at gmail.com
Sun Nov 17 19:29:18 UTC 2019


That doesn't speak very well of OK* as stewards of open knowledge if
they're trashing the list archives.

One archiving service to consider is "The Mail Archive
<https://www.mail-archive.com/faq.html#import>". They provide zero official
guarantees but have been successfully running a free public mail archive
for over 20 years. It looks like okfn-discuss is archived
<https://www.mail-archive.com/okfn-discuss@lists.okfn.org/info.html> there,
so the original announcement
<https://www.mail-archive.com/okfn-discuss@lists.okfn.org/msg00374.html> of
the open-science list is still available there.

Tom

On Sun, Nov 17, 2019 at 11:40 AM Jenny Molloy <jcmcoppice12 at gmail.com>
wrote:

> Dear All
>
> Open Knowledge Foundation will be closing down their mailman lists by
> January 31st, 2020 (I copy below the reasons for the decision for those who
> are interested, I was emailed along with a couple of others because we're
> "list owners" on mailman). Instead they will focus on offering a Discourse
> forum (https://discuss.okfn.org) which already has an open science
> category: https://discuss.okfn.org/c/working-groups/open-science
>
> There are two things for members of this list to think about:
> 1 - where are the important conversations on open science happening now?
> What new lists should we join as this one closes and are there gaps that
> need to be filled?
> 2 - where to preserve the list archives? Open Knowledge Foundation do not
> plan to do so publicly and there is value (I think) in preserving
> conversations dating back 12 years to a time when open science was at a
> completely different level of development. If anyone has ideas or could
> help with archiving that would be great - I have asked for a copy to be
> kept but I don't know in what form it will arrive!
>
> As a very early member of this list I think it played an important role in
> developing an open science community that has spun into many active and
> exciting communities around the world. Moving on is not a bad thing and
> there are so many more communication channels to connect on open science
> topics than back in 2008 - I'd love to hear your recommendations!
>
> Jenny
>
> The decision has come about for three reasons:
>
>    1. Managing the mailing lists and keeping the infrastructure up to
>    date represents an effort in terms of resources and administration time
>    that Open Knowledge Foundation is unable to meet going forward.
>    2. GDPR: EU legislation now requires us to have an active and current
>    knowledge of the data held on our websites, as well as the consent of the
>    subscribers regarding the use of their personal data, to ensure GDPR
>    compliance. Unfortunately, Mailman mailing lists don’t comply with this
>    Directive, which means we can’t use this tool any more.
>    3. We are currently implementing a new strategy within Open Knowledge
>    Foundation which will focus the organisation on several key themes, namely
>    Education, Health and Work. We want to keep fostering conversations but let
>    groups choose what the best platform is for that.
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> open-science mailing list
> open-science at lists.okfn.org
> https://lists.okfn.org/mailman/listinfo/open-science
> Unsubscribe: https://lists.okfn.org/mailman/options/open-science
>
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://lists.okfn.org/pipermail/open-science/attachments/20191117/a9d220ae/attachment-0002.html>


More information about the open-science mailing list