Panton Principles
The Panton Principles for Open Data in Science (sometimes abbreviated as PP) are recommendations for scientists on a simple standard notification to be attached to scientific data that are released to the public. The notification states, in effect, that other scientists can use the data without infringing copyrights. The idea is to promote sharing of scientific data, with the implied hope to accelerate and improve scientific research, stressing the principles of transparency and reproducibility.
Background
Large and ever increasing amounts of scientific data are generated in the framework of scientific research projects, and scientific data in this narrow sense are the target of the Panton Principles, particularly if the underlying research has been funded from public sources. No clear standards existed, however, for how to label data for reuse, and this is the gap that the Panton Principles are meant to fill.[1] The name Panton Principles is derived from the Panton Arms pub in Cambridge, UK, which was the location where the principles were originally drafted, starting in June 2009, primarily by Rufus Pollock, John Wilbanks, Cameron Neylon and Peter Murray-Rust. The Panton Principles were officially released for public signatures in February 2010.
References
- ↑ Peter Murray-Rust. The Panton Principles: A breakthrough on data licensing for public science?, Unilever Cambridge Centre for Molecular Informatics, 2009-05-16. Retrieved on 2010-03-23.