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The RESEARCH DATA ALLIANCE WG: Brokering Governance Wim Hugo – ICSU-WDS/ SAEON
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GEO BON Meta-data interoperability Input: ISO 19115, EML, NetCDF, SOS Output: Darwin Core, Darwin Core + ICSU-WDS Meta-data interoperability Input: ISO 19115, FGDC, EML, NetCDF, SOS, Dublin Core – but needs to grow beyond Output: Darwin Core, Darwin Core + DIRISA/ SAEON Meta-data interoperability Input: ISO 19115, FGDC, DDI, EML, NetCDF, SOS, Dublin Core*, Darwin Core Output: DataCite +, Dublin Core, ISO 19115, Darwin Core + Data Service Interoperability WMS, KML, SOS, GeoRSS, NetCDF, Darwin Core + Use Cases
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Multiple global initiatives and infrastructures of which GEO BON is in part an aggregator Almost all government/ grant funded with an open source grounding Governance style: community-adopted standards TDWG, OGC Business model Free services Membership Governance Use Cases: GEO BON
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Membership-based participation Governance likely to be community-driven and not WDS-driven Governance style: community-adopted standards Across many domains and disciplines Can provide guidance but not substance Business model Member contributions in kind – hosting brokering services Governance Use Cases: ICSU-WDS
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National participation Governance likely to be funder-driven Governance style: community-adopted standards Across many domains and disciplines Can provide guidance and recommend policies Business model Grant-funded and will involve a local brokering instance Brokering services free to government-funded researchers Governance Use Cases: SAEON/ DIRISA
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Participation from government-funded research and initiatives Governance envisaged as RDA-style community engagement Community-adopted standards Across many domains and disciplines Can provide guidance but not substance Business model Membership on behalf of community Free services Governance Use Cases: DIRISA/ SAEON
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Machine-readable, automated engagement with a brokering service (SLA, contracting, …) Services to execute transactions (depends on business model) Services to provide provenance information and annotated citations PIDs for brokering actions What is required? Use Case Commonalities
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Considerations: SLA/ Transaction End User Status Business Model Identifier Options Support Options Execution Options Input/ Source Options Output Licensing Options
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End User Status Registered/ Not Registered Funded/ Not Funded Business Model Free/ Premium/ Pay per Use/ Membership Identifier Options Combinatory/ New PID Support Options None/ Best Effort/ Response Time Commitment Execution Options Provider/ Broker/ Client Input/ Source Options Output License Options Combination/ Computed Use Case Variations
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The RESEARCH DATA ALLIANCE IG: Brokering Wim Hugo – ICSU-WDS/ SAEON Michael Diepenbroek - PANGAEA
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“Brokering Framework” Or “Brokering and Mediation Registry” Proposed New Working Group
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Multiple service protocols Multiple content standards for data and meta-data Multiple vocabularies and ontologies Multiple brokering approaches/technologies for mediation exist which are largely incompatible Project-driven limitations leads to lack of sustainability, loss of expertise, code, and infrastructure Diversity – Familiar to All
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Vision “ To describe, develop, test, and implement a Brokering Framework that allows publication, discovery, and invocation of brokering and mediation components in a standardised manner.” Mission Community consensus on the way in which brokering and mediation components are described, discovered, and invoked, based on real use cases – “Brokering Framework” – leading to a formal service and content standard. The formalisation of the standard is an external process and may involve participants in the working group, but is not a task for the working group; Demonstrating the value of the framework by developing, testing, and commissioning a reference implementation of a brokering and mediation registry. Vision and Mission
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Define a description schema for services, vocabularies, ontologies, content standards, and mediation components that allow services and clients to be matched. Establish a prototype registry based on the above. Describe a collection of mediation components that can interoperate through well-defined existing interface specifications and applicable standards to support implementation of a universal mediation capability, and populate the registry with a base set of these. Define a test bed environment for testing interoperability of mediation alternatives leading to recommendations for application areas. The focus will be on meta-data and data brokering across data systems that address different disciplines and scopes. Address the Need
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Supporting RDA Outcomes
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Value Proposition: Common Implementation Architecture
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Discovery and access including harvesting and synchronous distribution Content transformation for both meta-data and data Content enhancement and Linked Open Data enablement through vocabularies and ontologies Application to popular protocols and service definitions Mediation Functions to be Supported
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RDI Implementations Portal Builders Data Centres/ Repositories Science Publishers Service Providers Ontology and Vocabulary Services Who are the End Users?
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Contributions from members in respect of current working components and use cases, through regular working group meetings. Such meetings will be held every 2 months, and aligned with RDA Plenary Meetings. In-kind development contributions. Provisionally, this will include work to be done by DIRISA. Methods
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Confirmation of the elements of a brokering framework: component description standard, registry specifications A community consensus, achieved via RDA working group efforts, to develop and publish a brokering and mediation component description standard that can be used as the basis of a registry of such components. Community consensus on the capabilities (service methods) of a registry: allowing discovery and description of a brokering and mediation component. A shortlist of important components that are currently operational will be obtained with community assistance, and populated in the registry. Testing the registry in the context of real-life applications Practical Outcomes
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Confirm use cases and examples of brokering mediation, with a view to classifying them and developing a data model for description of components. Develop content and service standards for a registry of brokering and mediation components. Create and populate a registry of mediation options that allow components to be shared and improved. Create a test environment to examine existing and future capabilities. Test and evaluate. Consider governance of the registry and the test environment in collaboration with the Brokering Governance Working Group. Work Plan: Main Tasks
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Deliverables and Milestones
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ESSI Lab EarthCube OpenAire panFMP SAEON/ DIRISA Existing Work
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Open framework allows one or more implementations/ instances based on the framework. How do we describe a broker or mediator? Metadata Capabilities Software and Deployment Platform … Do we need formal registries based on the framework? How do we match objects and brokers? Crowdsourcing? Do we need metrics/ qualification for brokers and mediators? Does our registry support services? Automated registration and editing Discovery/ Capabilities Some Practical Questions
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Michael Diepenbroek (PANGAEA) Wim Hugo (SAEON, WDS-SC) Stefano Nativi (ESSI Lab) Jay Pearlman (EarthCube) Paolo Manghi (OpenAIRE) Uwe Schindler (PANGAEA, Apache Software Foundation) Health Life Sciences Humanities including social sciences Participants
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