Upstream Blog - FORCE11
@upstreamblog.bsky.social
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upstream.force11.org - a blogging platform for the
@force11.bsky.social
community
Research institutions do not support repositories, PID systems, and metadata infrastructure simply as narrow services purchased one use at a time. They support them as shared institutional capacity. Read more in
@chodacki.bsky.social
new post on Upstream:
upstream.force11.org/why-institut...
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Not the Right Fit: How Transactional Infrastructure Models Clash with Institutional Realities
Many scholarly infrastructure business models fit institutions poorly. They tie cost to transactions, outputs, or rising use in ways that make adoption harder to sustain over time. That is a problem f...
https://upstream.force11.org/why-institutions-struggle-with-transactional-infrastructure-models/
20 days ago
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reposted by
Upstream Blog - FORCE11
FORCE11
2 months ago
What is the future of data management plans? A new post on
@upstreamblog.bsky.social
exploring both the positive and negative aspects of changes at NIH and NSF. And suggests a path to balance burden reduction with thoughtful planning.
doi.org/10.54900/fbq...
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What is the Future of Data Management Plans?
Recent developments from major US funders suggest a shift in how the vision of machine-actionable data management plans is being implemented. This post reviews the positive and negative aspects of the...
https://doi.org/10.54900/fbq63-61s08
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New community-driven typology of data uses across disciplines and recommendations on how to capture data use types in metadata.
@force11.bsky.social
@makedatacount.bsky.social
doi.org/10.54900/37x...
add a skeleton here at some point
2 months ago
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reposted by
Upstream Blog - FORCE11
FORCE11
4 months ago
Sharing the load: Building a collective to support open research information online. New post on
@upstreamblog.bsky.social
! Can we share resources and burdens to make available key open research information resources in actionable and connectable form in the cloud?
doi.org/10.54900/2pn...
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Sharing the load: Building a collective to support open research information online
Can we share resources and burdens to make available key open research information resources in actionable and connectable form in the cloud? Through sharing processes and systems, is it possible, ove...
https://doi.org/10.54900/2pnyq-nhx95
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We can’t advance open science if we don’t measure it. Read new post on Upstream from Iratxe Puebla and Eleonora Colangelo on the Open Science Monitoring Initiative's survey to identify current monitoring practices among journals, repositories and other providers.
doi.org/10.54900/5gj...
add a skeleton here at some point
6 months ago
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New on Upstream: From Promise to Precarity: The Plight of International Postdocs - When Will Academia Act? International postdocs are essential to research, yet too often face insecurity & systemic inequities. It’s time for collective action:
doi.org/10.54900/w8z...
#academia
#postdocs
#force11
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From Promise to Precarity: The Plight of International Postdocs — When Will Academia Act?
Postdocs often relocate globally, facing cultural barriers, visa issues, and discrimination alone. Without strong support networks, they're treated as disposable despite being vital to research. We mu...
https://doi.org/10.54900/w8z54-zq587
8 months ago
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“Implications, there are a few. Trying to make sense of all of this" New
@upstreamblog.bsky.social
post from
@dannykay68.bsky.social
- Recent shifts across the scholarly information ecosystem & what means for libraries, infrastructure providers, and open science advocates:
doi.org/10.54900/6hp...
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Implications, there are a few. Trying to make sense of all of this
How do we make sense of the implications of current geopolitical, financial and technological volatility? What impact will all of this have on the relationship between libraries and publishers, and li...
https://doi.org/10.54900/6hpza-sg998
12 months ago
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How does open science hold up in times of crisis?
@jeroenbosman.bsky.social
&
@jeroenson.bsky.social
explore this in a sharp post on Upstream:
doi.org/10.54900/pqr...
They outline threats, map types of resilience, and remind us: open science isn’t just at risk…it’s also part of the solution.
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The resilience of open science in times of crisis
The increasingly hostile attitude of the new U.S. government towards science and academia leaves many of us deeply concerned— if not outright alarmed. In an effort to better understand the unfolding s...
https://doi.org/10.54900/pqrcx-8d019
about 1 year ago
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