So, what to do? A lot of progress so far has come from things like the Bermuda Principles, whereby the NIH and Wellcome Trust essentially forced biologists to share human genome data. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bermuda_Principles …
-
Show this thread
-
Or the NIH public access policy, which requires NIH-funded research papers to be shared after an embargo period: https://publicaccess.nih.gov/
1 reply 0 retweets 16 likesShow this thread -
I'm a huge fan of these and similar actions, and of people and organizations like
@hjoseph,@petersuber,@SPARC_NA and the many, many others who helped them become a reality. These are some of the most important accomplishments of humanity in the past decades.1 reply 4 retweets 16 likesShow this thread -
At the same time, over the long run we want to avoid running things through centralized control. Command-and-control economies have a terrible historical record, and usually end up inhibiting innovation.
1 reply 1 retweet 17 likesShow this thread -
That's my view of the problems. What of the solutions? How to create a healthy competitive marketplace in scientific publishing?
5 replies 0 retweets 8 likesShow this thread -
There's not going to be a silver bullet. It's going to require hundreds of changes. One crucial change is getting existing funders to take software tools seriously. Budgets for tools, for programmers, for long-term maintenance, & VC / grants for new organizations to develop tools
1 reply 7 retweets 39 likesShow this thread -
And payment for services needs to align incentives: the people benefiting from the services should be paying for them, to set up the virtuous feedback loop: genuinely better service => more revenue.
2 replies 0 retweets 24 likesShow this thread -
This is a tough problem for open * solutions (open access, data, code, collaboration). It still hasn't been solved in the world of open source software. Though companies like Kickstarter and Patreon and ideas like dominant assurance contracts are making progress in this space.
2 replies 0 retweets 14 likesShow this thread -
Replying to @michael_nielsen
Kickstarter & Patreon, but also
@cziscience &@JohnArnoldFndtn, as well as the increased VC interest coming from the increasing pace of notable acquisitions.1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes -
Considering the value that has been created, a 1,000x increase in funding beyond those sources seems about right. SMTP, SSL, HTTP, TCP/IP, Linux, Wikipedia etc all arose out of an ecosystem whose funding rounds down to $0, even today, on the scale of the industries they support
2 replies 0 retweets 2 likes
TBC, I don't mean to be dismissive at all of Patreon etc. Quite the reverse: they're marvellous first steps! What I want is for ideas like that to be far, far more successful.
Loading seems to be taking a while.
Twitter may be over capacity or experiencing a momentary hiccup. Try again or visit Twitter Status for more information.