LaizaMelenaFirstPaper 2 - 20 Nov 2011 - Main.EbenMoglen
|
|
META TOPICPARENT | name="FirstPaper" |
It is strongly recommended that you include your outline in the body of your essay by using the outline as section titles. The headings below are there to remind you how section and subsection titles are formatted. | | There are severe obstacles to progress. First, there is an inequitable access and distribution of biological information in the biodiversity-rich but economically-poorer countries. Most of the existing biodiversity literary and specimen resources are concentrated in developed countries even though most biodiversity hotspots are in the developing world (see http://www.biodiversityhotspots.org/xp/Hotspots/). Many taxonomists in the developing world frequently lack access to the library facilities that enable them to navigate fully the fragmented taxonomy of a group (Wheeler et al., 2004; Carvalho et al., 2005). This has resulted in an “information gradient” that prevents most peoples in poorer countries from equitable, direct access to biodiversity information and prevents people from adding to biological knowledge. As a consequence, the people that may have the most knowledge of biological diversity are the least able to contribute to the field. Second, even conservation biologists in developed countries have limited access to resources because these are not coherently organized and integrated. Furthermore, accessing these resources can be a costly and inefficient (Godfray 2007; Minelli 2003), and researchers must travel far to spend most of their time standing in front of photocopy machines to collect information. | |
< < | | | Building the Biodiversity Information Commons | |
< < | A solution to the limited and fragmented biodiversity information and inequitable distribution of the existing information is a Biodiversity Information Commons (BIC), that is a network of biological information maintained in the public domain for common use (see http://www.dlib.org/dlib/june02/moritz/06moritz.html). A fundamental principle of the BIC is that all biodiversity information from its inception should be dedicated to free not-for-profit, research, education, and conservation uses, and should embrace the goal of free universal access. A BIC can be successful because it has the potential of reducing costs and increasing efficiency, while democratizing the access and contribution to biological knowledge. | > > | A solution to the limited and fragmented biodiversity information and inequitable distribution of the existing information is a Biodiversity Information Commons (BIC), that is a network of biological information maintained in the public domain for common use (see http://www.dlib.org/dlib/june02/moritz/06moritz.html).
Why the public domain
rather than under free license? Is the goal to enable people to make
unfree appropriations of the material contained? Or is "public
domain" here an imprecise, unlawerly approximate synonym for "under
free license" or "under Creative Commons BY-SA" or equivalent?
A fundamental principle of the BIC is that all biodiversity information from its inception should be dedicated to free not-for-profit, research, education, and conservation uses, and should embrace the goal of free universal access. A BIC can be successful because it has the potential of reducing costs and increasing efficiency, while democratizing the access and contribution to biological knowledge.
A BIC can have negligible costs to the operator while providing free information to peoples around the world. A property of digital information is that it is an extensible resource. Once information and data is digitized and placed on a web platform, there is virtually zero transaction costs to enable a lot of users to access the information. This distinctive quality of digital information can enable a BIC to provide unrestricted access to biological information to all citizens of the world who have internet access at no additional cost for each incremental user. Take for example, the experience of the Biodiversity Heritage Library, a consortium of natural history libraries that have digitized over 47,000 titles and 35 million pages of biodiversity literature available for open access (see http://biodivlib.wikispaces.com/About). The Library worked with the Internet Archive to digitize their books at a low cost of 10 cents a page with funds provided by private foundations.
Why is $0.10/page a "low
cost"? The cost of scanning books and producing perfect output,
using readily-available hardware and free software is, for amateurs
like me, under $1.35 per book, plus cost of labor, on the order of
40 minutes per book. Labor will have to be quite expensive before
$0.10/page ceases to be anything but a high price. Did you do any
calculating, or did you take someone else's figures for
granted? | | | |
< < | A BIC can have negligible costs to the operator while providing free information to peoples around the world. A property of digital information is that it is an extensible resource. Once information and data is digitized and placed on a web platform, there is virtually zero transaction costs to enable a lot of users to access the information. This distinctive quality of digital information can enable a BIC to provide unrestricted access to biological information to all citizens of the world who have internet access at no additional cost for each incremental user. Take for example, the experience of the Biodiversity Heritage Library, a consortium of natural history libraries that have digitized over 47,000 titles and 35 million pages of biodiversity literature available for open access (see http://biodivlib.wikispaces.com/About). The Library worked with the Internet Archive to digitize their books at a low cost of 10 cents a page with funds provided by private foundations. The benefits have been immediate: the BHL is becoming a free, single-access library for users worldwide that need to consult and download biodiversity literature. | > > | The benefits have been immediate: the BHL is becoming a free, single-access library for users worldwide that need to consult and download biodiversity literature. | | A BIC can increase the efficiency of contributing to biodiversity information, and consequently the quality of that information. One of the core goals of a BIC is that it should promote a dynamic knowledge ecology, that is foster the growth of knowledge through interactions between people, and improve decision-making and innovation through networks of collaboration. To accomplish this goal, a BIC should be designed to enable content to be continuously peer reviewed and updated with new information. One of the most successful examples of this is the Encyclopedia of Life (see http://eol.org), a global collaborative effort to document all 1.9 million named species on Earth and make that information freely accessible through the Internet. In the four years the EOL has been operating, users have collected and vetted information on 40 percent of the planet’s known species, and they expect to hold data on every known plant, animal, insect and microbe species by 2017. Undoubtedly, such a massive collection has been amassed so quickly because millions of users have contributed their knowledge. Users can add new information or request that existing information be updated or changed, and curators will review it. Even if the information is not changed, all comments and hypotheses are preserved on the website for anyone to review creating an unprecedented database of biological information and transparency. Furthermore, an integrated encyclopedia has the potential to detect worldwide patters and connections between different forms of life. For example, biologists are already looking for lifespan patterns or similarities in resistance or susceptibility to disease across a broad range of EOL species pages, aiming to find new species and genes to target in longevity studies, vaccine development and other medical research. | |
> > | I don't quite understand
the point of this essay yet. Is it to recommend the wisdom of giving
people access to knowledge? If so, why restrict it to this tiny
example? Is it to argue that this knowledge should be free while
other knowledge shouldn't? If so, what's the difference between this
and other socially-useful knowledge? Are you illustrating the
economy of free knowledge distribution? If so, shouldn't your
accounting be more intensive, and—dare I say—accurate?
Is it to recount your personal experience with this particular effort
to free knowledge? If so, where are you in here? Why is the one
subject about which a lawyer might have a particular interest in the
details (namely the licensing) the part on which you're obscure? Why
is there only discussion of why this is a good idea, without any
discussion of who opposes it and why, if anyone, and if not, why
Brewster Kahle and the support of some "foundations" should be
necessary to do something that governments representing billions of
people supposedly need?
So it seems to me that where the next draft needs to go is towards
answering the questions that lie after "this is a good idea and some
people seem to be already sort of doing it," which is where the piece
presently leaves the reader.
| |
You are entitled to restrict access to your paper if you want to. But we all derive immense benefit from reading one another's work, and I hope you won't feel the need unless the subject matter is personal and its disclosure would be harmful or undesirable.
To restrict access to your paper simply delete the "#" character on the next two lines: |
|
LaizaMelenaFirstPaper 1 - 11 Nov 2011 - Main.LaizaMelena
|
|
> > |
META TOPICPARENT | name="FirstPaper" |
It is strongly recommended that you include your outline in the body of your essay by using the outline as section titles. The headings below are there to remind you how section and subsection titles are formatted.
Developing an Information Commons for Biodiversity Knowledge
-- By LaizaMelena
A very extensive body of data and information has been accumulated about the world's biodiversity, but this information is not coherently organized or integrated, making it difficult for researchers and stakeholders to access and contribute to the information. Biodiversity research should evolve new means of organizing and disseminating information to meet existing environmental and economic challenges, and this evolution will inevitably involve using the internet as the medium of data access and exchange. This essay will argue that universal and open access to biodiversity information on the internet is a practical imperative for the international conservation community, and that this goal should be accomplished through the promotion and development of a sustainable Biodiversity Information Commons (BIC).
The Case for a Biodiversity Information Commons
There is a growing recognition that the conservation of biological diversity is "a common concern of humankind" and is an integral part of the global sustainable development process. The preservation of biological diversity has practical and economic value for a broad range of issues, including: the discovery of wild plant species adaptable for agriculture, the discovery of beneficial organisms for pharmaceuticals, to prevent the outbreak of pathogens, or to halt harmful invasive species. However, there is very little knowledge about the wealth and range of biological diversity and it is imperative to increase this knowledge before environmental disasters and economic development further reduce biodiversity.
There are severe obstacles to progress. First, there is an inequitable access and distribution of biological information in the biodiversity-rich but economically-poorer countries. Most of the existing biodiversity literary and specimen resources are concentrated in developed countries even though most biodiversity hotspots are in the developing world (see http://www.biodiversityhotspots.org/xp/Hotspots/). Many taxonomists in the developing world frequently lack access to the library facilities that enable them to navigate fully the fragmented taxonomy of a group (Wheeler et al., 2004; Carvalho et al., 2005). This has resulted in an “information gradient” that prevents most peoples in poorer countries from equitable, direct access to biodiversity information and prevents people from adding to biological knowledge. As a consequence, the people that may have the most knowledge of biological diversity are the least able to contribute to the field. Second, even conservation biologists in developed countries have limited access to resources because these are not coherently organized and integrated. Furthermore, accessing these resources can be a costly and inefficient (Godfray 2007; Minelli 2003), and researchers must travel far to spend most of their time standing in front of photocopy machines to collect information.
Building the Biodiversity Information Commons
A solution to the limited and fragmented biodiversity information and inequitable distribution of the existing information is a Biodiversity Information Commons (BIC), that is a network of biological information maintained in the public domain for common use (see http://www.dlib.org/dlib/june02/moritz/06moritz.html). A fundamental principle of the BIC is that all biodiversity information from its inception should be dedicated to free not-for-profit, research, education, and conservation uses, and should embrace the goal of free universal access. A BIC can be successful because it has the potential of reducing costs and increasing efficiency, while democratizing the access and contribution to biological knowledge.
A BIC can have negligible costs to the operator while providing free information to peoples around the world. A property of digital information is that it is an extensible resource. Once information and data is digitized and placed on a web platform, there is virtually zero transaction costs to enable a lot of users to access the information. This distinctive quality of digital information can enable a BIC to provide unrestricted access to biological information to all citizens of the world who have internet access at no additional cost for each incremental user. Take for example, the experience of the Biodiversity Heritage Library, a consortium of natural history libraries that have digitized over 47,000 titles and 35 million pages of biodiversity literature available for open access (see http://biodivlib.wikispaces.com/About). The Library worked with the Internet Archive to digitize their books at a low cost of 10 cents a page with funds provided by private foundations. The benefits have been immediate: the BHL is becoming a free, single-access library for users worldwide that need to consult and download biodiversity literature.
A BIC can increase the efficiency of contributing to biodiversity information, and consequently the quality of that information. One of the core goals of a BIC is that it should promote a dynamic knowledge ecology, that is foster the growth of knowledge through interactions between people, and improve decision-making and innovation through networks of collaboration. To accomplish this goal, a BIC should be designed to enable content to be continuously peer reviewed and updated with new information. One of the most successful examples of this is the Encyclopedia of Life (see http://eol.org), a global collaborative effort to document all 1.9 million named species on Earth and make that information freely accessible through the Internet. In the four years the EOL has been operating, users have collected and vetted information on 40 percent of the planet’s known species, and they expect to hold data on every known plant, animal, insect and microbe species by 2017. Undoubtedly, such a massive collection has been amassed so quickly because millions of users have contributed their knowledge. Users can add new information or request that existing information be updated or changed, and curators will review it. Even if the information is not changed, all comments and hypotheses are preserved on the website for anyone to review creating an unprecedented database of biological information and transparency. Furthermore, an integrated encyclopedia has the potential to detect worldwide patters and connections between different forms of life. For example, biologists are already looking for lifespan patterns or similarities in resistance or susceptibility to disease across a broad range of EOL species pages, aiming to find new species and genes to target in longevity studies, vaccine development and other medical research.
You are entitled to restrict access to your paper if you want to. But we all derive immense benefit from reading one another's work, and I hope you won't feel the need unless the subject matter is personal and its disclosure would be harmful or undesirable.
To restrict access to your paper simply delete the "#" character on the next two lines:
Note: TWiki has strict formatting rules for preference declarations. Make sure you preserve the three spaces, asterisk, and extra space at the beginning of these lines. If you wish to give access to any other users simply add them to the comma separated ALLOWTOPICVIEW list. |
|
|
|
This site is powered by the TWiki collaboration platform. All material on this collaboration platform is the property of the contributing authors. All material marked as authored by Eben Moglen is available under the license terms CC-BY-SA version 4.
|
|