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Data: legal issues 15 February, 2016 Marijn Post and Hugo Besemer
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Case: A conversation at the bus station Work with you neighbour: ● Read the conversation and answer the questions
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Question 1 & 2 Joaquim says it is the law that the data that you collect is always your intellectual property. We know that you are not legal experts, but what would you think? Do you think Liya owns intellectual property on the distribution maps?
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Intellectual Property Rights Copyrights Industrial Property ● Patents ● Industrial designs ● Trademarks ● Geographical indications ● Trade Secrets Sui Generis systems ● Plant Variety Protection (Plant Breeders’ Rights) ● Database rights Protection of works, ideas, inventions,... MSc course LAW-32306
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Which law applies? Which jurisdiction ● Country where the data is physically stored ● Country of the employment agreement ● Country of the funding agreement Which law ● Copyright law ● Database rights ● None
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Copyright No copyrights: ● Bare facts Copyrights: ● The form in which data is presented ● The selection or structure
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Copyright in the NL Automatic protection: Until 70 years after author's death ● Creator ● Employer of the creator (Art. 7: NL) Copyrights give you the exclusive right to: ● Publish the work ● Duplicate/reproduce the work Copyright can be given away, sold, inherited, waived, claimed by funding agent or employer You always have moral or personality rights, which gives you the 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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Database right Introduced in the EU in 1996 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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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
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Example 1: Scopus (bibliographic database)
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Example 2: Land use database NL
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Question 3 Do you agree with Joseph that everybody can use and publish about the data that Wupke’s MSc student stored on Figshare?
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You can make data available with usage conditions or a license Why: clarity ● Creative commons ● Open data commons ● DANS-license Questions if there is no license: Is the data protected or not? Do I need to ask permission for use and reuse?
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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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DRYAD: research data repository
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Question 4 & 5 Do you think the PhD students own their data, or does the department or even the university owns the data? Can Joseph write more articles about the data he is collecting after he has defended his thesis?
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Owner No central WUR policy yet Contracts: ● Employer-employee ● Research group-employee or student ● Research group-funder ● With commercial partners Use the Data Management Plan to discuss matters with your supervisors
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Question 6 If you were Hans, what would you say to the MSc student (and Wupke)?
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Research Data Retention The Netherlands Code of Conduct for Scientific Practice : Raw research data are stored for at least ten years. These data are made available to other scientific practitioners at request. Raw research data are archived in such a way that they can be consulted at a minimum expense of time and effort.
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Who requires (or recommends) retention? Institutions Funders Learned societies / disciplines Journals ... Seldom enforced
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Retention of research data Motivations ● As starting point for new research ● For verification purposes ● To protect patents ● As evidence in case of academic misconduct ● To meet formal requirements
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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 (via informed consent)
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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. https://www.surf.nl/binaries/content/assets /surf/en/knowledgebase/2009/SURFdirect_De+juridische +status+van+ruwe+data_wegwijzer_ENG.pdfhttps://www.surf.nl/binaries/content/assets /surf/en/knowledgebase/2009/SURFdirect_De+juridische +status+van+ruwe+data_wegwijzer_ENG.pdf Ball, A. (2012). ‘How to License Research Data’. DCC How-to Guides. Edinburgh: Digital Curation Centre. http://www.dcc.ac.uk/resources/how-guides/license- research-data http://www.dcc.ac.uk/resources/how-guides/license- research-data
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Questions?
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