13. März 2025
  WEITERE NEWS
Aktuelles aus
L
ibrary
Essentials

In der Ausgabe 10-2024/1-2025 (Dez. 2024/Jan. 2025) lesen Sie u.a.:

  • Open Investing in wissenschaftlichen Bibliotheken
  • Forschungsdaten gemeinsam gestalten: das Stabi Lab in Berlin
  • Die EU-KI-Verordnung: wegweisende Regeln für vertrauenswürdige Künstliche Intelligenz
  • Ein Balanceakt: ethisches Dilemma der KI in der Hochschulbildung
  • Ungenutztes Potenzial oder riskanter Trend? Verdeckte KI-Nutzung in wissenschaftlichen Veröffentlichungen
  • Warum die Indizierung von zurückgezogenen Publikationen zum Problem wird
  • Klassische Medien auf dem Abstellgleis bei Jugendlichen
  • Warum Gen Z kaum noch Bücher liest
  • Zwischen Sichtbarkeit und Bedeutung: die Rolle der digitalen Kuratierung bei OpenScience während der Pandemie
  • USA: Wissenschaftliche Bibliothekare organisieren sich gegen drohende Kürzungen und den Abbau öffentlicher Bildung unter der kommenden Trump-Administration
  • Makerspaces: kreative Lernräume in wissenschaftlichen Bibliotheken
  • Wie KI antike Texte lesbar macht
  • Fachzeitschriften von Massenrücktritten der Redaktionen betroffen
u.v.m.
  fachbuchjournal

DataCite, re3data.org, and Databib Announce Collaboration

Databib and “re3data.org – Registry of Research Data Repositories” are pleased to announce their plan to merge their two projects into one service that will be managed under the auspices of DataCite by the end of 2015. Their joint proposal to the DataCite General Assembly was approved today, in advance of the 3rd Plenary Meeting of the Research Data Alliance (RDA) in Dublin, Ireland.

The aim of this merger is to reduce duplication of effort and to better serve the research community with a single, sustainable registry of research data repositories that incorporates the best features of both projects.

re3data.org and Databib have agreed to the following five principles for successful cooperation:

1.   Openness: the metadata and the interfaces of the joint registry will be openly accessible. Metadata records will be made accessible under terms of the Creative Commons CC0 protocol;

2.   Optimal quality assurance: a two-stage workflow, with a first review of submissions by an international editorial board plus a second one for consistency, will guarantee the quality and currency of records;

3.   Development of innovative functionalities: cooperative development of new functionality for the joint registry and further integration with a global ecosystem of infrastructures that meet the needs of data-driven research and open science;

4.   Shared leadership: the joint registry will be lead by two representatives (one from each project) as equal partners;

5.   Sustainability: both projects will work together on a sustainable governance structure and a permanent infrastructure for the joint registry.

The joint registry will be operated under the name “re3data.org – Registry of Research Data Repositories” with its editorial board retaining the name of Databib. Both registries have posted a Memorandum of Understanding on their respective websites and have exchanged metadata records in advance of fully merging their platforms and processes. By the end of 2015, the merged registry will become an imprint of DataCite and be included in its suite of services.

http://databib.org