Licensing Research Data » History » Version 6
Steve Welburn, 2013-01-07 02:26 PM
1 | 3 | Steve Welburn | h1. Licensing Research Data |
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2 | 2 | Steve Welburn | |
3 | 2 | Steve Welburn | If you don't supply a license for your research data, you reserve all rights to its use (see [[copyright]]). However, copyright does not exist on factual data itself, only on the “creative” part of the data – e.g. the layout of a spreadsheet. |
4 | 2 | Steve Welburn | |
5 | 2 | Steve Welburn | If you apply an Attribution or Non-Commercial CC license, it may prevent people from using your data. It is therefore recommended that a Creative Commons CC0 waiver is used – this surrenders rights to the data as far as possible. Attribution should still occur if people use your data in their research - good research practice means that people should cite your data if it is used, and [[Research_Council_Requirements#EPSRC|EPSRC principles]] state that credit should be given. |
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7 | 5 | Steve Welburn | Details of the various Creative Commons licenses are available on the "CC web-site":http://creativecommons.org/licenses/. |
8 | 4 | Steve Welburn | |
9 | 6 | Steve Welburn | "Other":http://opendefinition.org/licenses/#Data Open Data licenses are also available. The DCC provides "a guide":http://www.dcc.ac.uk/resources/how-guides/license-research-data on how to license research data. |
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11 | 2 | Steve Welburn | The (work in progress) Creative Commons 4.0 licenses aim to be more data friendly than the current CC 3.0 licenses and may be appropriate. |
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13 | 6 | Steve Welburn | If you are releasing software, we recommend you consult the Sound Software site for information. |