Do you work in open source? Do you think it has a funding problem? If so, please take my 10 minute survey at https://opensource.study. By participating, you can help provide an understanding of what has worked and what hasn’t in the ecosystem.
This survey is part of a research project at ASU and is completely voluntary. If you have any questions about participation, please reach out to me here.
RT by @CopernicusEU: Don’t forget to sign up for our first webinar in a series dedicated to the Copernicus Data Space Ecosystem and discover first-hand the next step in the (r)evolution of the access to #Copernicus#EO#OpenData🛰️🇪🇺
"Bei keiner der für 2024 angekündigten deutschen Open-Data-Day-Veranstaltungen findet sich das Thema Gender Data Gap.
„Die Auswirkungen geschlechtsspezifischer Datenlücken werden völlig unterschätzt“, so die Präsidentin des djb, Ursula Matthiessen-Kreuder. „Es besteht ein dringender Bedarf an nach Geschlechtern aufgeschlüsselten Daten.“"
La première est un guide des sources sur le #matrimoine dans les #fonds privés, issu du stage de Léa Boeglin sous la direction de @SDD Ce guide sera prochainement mis en ligne et enrichi par d'autres fonds.
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Seconde restitution d'un travail réalisé par Shannon Bruderer et Élisa Mayeur dans le cadre de leur Master 2 en #Histoire de l'#art et en #HumanitésNumériques à Lyon 2 : elles ont étudié la place des #femmes dans l'espace public lyonnais, en partant de l'index des voies de Lyon mis en ligne en #OpenData par les #ArchivesDeLyon
#AI#OpenData#DigitalCommons: "In February, our AI and the Commons community call’s guests were Melanie Dulong de Rosnay and Yaniv Benhamou. The meeting focused on their recent paper on Open Data Commons Licenses (ODCL), which proposes a standardized approach for licensing various rights in data. The licenses expand the open licensing approach by adding mechanisms for personal data and limitations on the scope of use. In addition, they combine licensing with a data trust and other collective forms of data governance.
The exploration that led to the creation of the licenses is related to questions about the use of data in AI training. Melanie and Yaniv claim that standardized licensing is a strong tool to protect both user rights and the commons as long as limitations of open licenses as tools for governing complex rights in data are addressed. We have also been exploring this issue, starting with the AI_Commons case study. We have been arguing that Open Access and related approaches provide minimal data governance mechanisms that are insufficient to address those challenges that go beyond copyright issues. Dulong de Rosnay and Benhamou draw similar conclusions from the current state of data sharing: “the ethos of the commons has yet to be fully performed and refined for data.”
“@creativecommons hosted a webinar “Whose Open Culture? Decolonization, Indigenization, and Restitution” ... intersection of indigenous knowledge and open sharing ... spanned a variety of topics regarding indigenous sovereignty over culture, respectful terminology, and the legacy of colonialism and how it still exists today. While we strive for more open sharing, it is important to recognize the cases where culture should not be open to all.”
Ich: Können wir offene Busdaten haben?
Flensburg: Wir haben doch Busdaten?
Bus Daten in Flensburg: Jegliche Nutzung von Daten und Diensten, die das persönliche Interesse eines durschnittlichen Fahrgastes übersteigen oder automatisierte Verfahren zum Informationsabruf nutzen sind ausdrücklich unzulässig.
Join us and The NYC Office of Technology and Innovation's Open Data Team for NYC School of Data, #NYC's #civictech conference, with sessions unpacking #opendata#servicedesign#PublicInterestTech. We'll have panels, workshops, classes, and more!
Sat, 3/23, at CUNY School of Law 📆
bit.ly/sodata24-tickets 🎟️