Hrynaszkiewicz Iain, Busch Stefan, Cockerill Matthew J
Faculty of 1000, London, UK.
BMC Res Notes. 2013 Aug 21;6:318. doi: 10.1186/1756-0500-6-318.
We report the outcomes of BioMed Central's public consultation on implementing open data-compliant licensing in peer-reviewed open access journals. Respondents (42) to the 2012 consultation were six to one in favor (29 in support; 5 against; 8 abstentions) of changing our authors' default open access copyright license agreement, to introduce the Creative Commons CC0 public domain waiver for data published in BioMed Central's journals. We summarize the different questions we received in response to the consultation and our responses to them - matters such as citation, plagiarism, patient privacy, and commercial use were raised. In light of the support for open data in our journals we outline our plans to implement, in September 2013, a combined Creative Commons Attribution license for published articles (papers) and Creative Commons CC0 waiver for published data.
我们报告了生物医学中心(BioMed Central)就同行评审开放获取期刊实施符合开放数据要求的许可进行公开咨询的结果。2012年咨询的42名受访者以6比1的比例支持(29人支持;5人反对;8人弃权)更改我们作者默认的开放获取版权许可协议,为发表在生物医学中心期刊上的数据引入知识共享CC0公共领域豁免。我们总结了针对此次咨询收到的不同问题以及我们对这些问题的答复——诸如引用、剽窃、患者隐私和商业用途等事项被提及。鉴于对我们期刊开放数据的支持,我们概述了在2013年9月实施以下措施的计划:为已发表文章(论文)采用知识共享署名许可,为已发表数据采用知识共享CC0豁免。