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Data: legal issues 15 April 2013 Marianne Renkema & Liza Bruggenkamp
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Two situations A researcher wants to protect his own data A researcher wants to use data from other people
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Legal issues No legal protection Protection by copyright Protection by database right Privacy
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No legal protection Raw data or facts Government data The effort in producing data Keep them secret ● Not ethical ● Contract with funding agent
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Protection by copyright The form in which data are presented The selection or structure
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Copyright or authors’ rights Economic or exploitation rights Exclusive right to: ● Publish the work ● Duplicate/reproduce the work Moral or personality rights Right to oppose to: ● your work being published without your name or with a different title ● Radical changes that harm your good name http://www.ivir.nl/legislation/nl/copyrightact.html
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Copyright notice Automatic protection Duration: ● Until 70 years after author's death ● Until 70 years after publication (anonymous work) A copyright notice is not required, but it… ● Makes clear that the work is copyright protected ● Shows who the copyright owner is Copyright 2010, John Johnson © John Johnson 2010
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Copyright owner Initially: Creator Employer of the creator (art 7 Aw) Copyright can be given away, sold, inherited, waived, claimed by funding agent,...
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What if data is copyright protected? Can you use the data without consent? Can you publish the data without consent? Can you use a figure of table with data from someone’s publication in your own publication without consent?
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Database right The legal definition of a database comprises three essential elements: the database must consist of independent items the database must be searchable or systematically arranged so that the individual items can be traced there must have been a substantial investment in the database (obtaining, presenting, and/or verifying the data) Protection of the investment in time and money Duration 15 Years
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Example 1: USDA Nutrient database
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Example 1: USDA Nutrient database(2)
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Example 2: Scopus (bibliographic database)
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Example 2: Scopus (2)
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Database right: required permissions The producer’s consent is required for the following actions: retrieving (i.e. copying or downloading) substantial portions of the database repeatedly and systematically retrieving non-substantial portions of the database reusing (i.e. publishing) substantial portions of the database Exceptions: government database; scientific use (not reuse)
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Privacy Personal Data Protection Act Living persons The data should be anonymized if possible The purpose for which the data is necessary must in any case be clearly specified No more data may be collected than is necessary to achieve that purpose You need consent of the individual
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Back to the two situations A researcher wants to protect his own data ● Don’t publish ● Publish (about) the data and make data available on request (Facebook)Facebook ● Publish about the data, make data freely available and make a rights statement or licence (“terms of use”) (ADHD)ADHD A researcher wants to use data from other people example example ● He can download and use the data ● He cannot publish the data(base) without permission
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Facebook: data available on request? http://www.nature.com/news/facebook-likes-the-scientific-method-1.11064
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Data made available via DANS https://easy.dans.knaw.nl/ui/datasets/id/easy-dataset:50991/tab/1
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Data files in DANS
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UniProt (http://www.uniprot.org/help/license)
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Data licensing
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Why license research data? Clarity No license: Is the data protected or not? Do I need to ask permission for use and reuse?
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Types of licenses Source: Alex Ball, 2011. Presentation on Data licensing.
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Licensing options Most repositories or databases use a standard license or have a terms of use statement. Bespoke licences ● e.g. DANS repository (Conditions of use)Conditions of use Standard licenses ● Creative Commons (see UniProt)UniProt ● CC0 most used ● Open Data Commons
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Case Who is the owner of the data? What would you do in a situation like this?
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Further reading De Cock Buning, M., Ringnalda, A., van der Linden, T. (2009). The legal status of raw data: a guide for research practice. Utrecht: SURF Foundation. Available online: http://www.surf.nl/en/publicaties/Documents/SURFdirect _De%20juridische%20status%20van%20ruwe%20data_ wegwijzer_ENG.pdf Ball, A. (2012). ‘How to License Research Data’. DCC How-to Guides. Edinburgh: Digital Curation Centre. Available online: http://www.dcc.ac.uk/resources/how- guides/license-research-data
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Questions?
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