Open Science—A Question of Trust

Author:

Clark Jonathan1

Affiliation:

1. The DOI Foundation, c/o EDItEUR, London N7 9DP, United Kingdom

Abstract

Collaboration and the sharing of knowledge is at the heart of Open Science (OS). However, we need to know that the knowledge we find and share is really what it purports to be; and we need to know that the authors we hope to collaborate with are really the people they claim to be. In this paper, the author argues that a prerequisite for OS is trust and that persistent identifiers help to build that trust. The persistent identifier systems must themselves be trustworthy and they must be able to connect the user or their machine to the information they need now and into the future. Infrastructure is rather like plumbing: It goes unnoticed and unappreciated until it fails. This paper puts infrastructure for persistent identifiers in the spotlight as a core component of OS.

Publisher

MIT Press - Journals

Subject

General Earth and Planetary Sciences,General Environmental Science

Reference23 articles.

1. [1] UNESCO global open access portal. Available at: http://www.unesco.org/new/en/communication-and-information/portals-and-platforms/goap/open-science-movement/. Accessed 7 January 2021

2. [3] Valle, M., et al. A Persistent Identifier (PID) policy for the European Open Science Cloud, Report from the European Open Science Cloud FAIR and Architecture Working Groups. Available at: https://doi.org/10.2777/926037. Accessed 7 January 2021

3. Persistent identifiers: the building blocks of the research information infrastructure

4. [5] Bilder, G., Lin, J., Neylon, C.: Principles for open scholarly infrastructure-v1. Figshare (2015). Available at: https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.1314859. Accessed 7 January 2021

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