The Digital Knowledge Factory : Numeric Production and Validation of Scientific Contents.
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Otros Autores: | , , , |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Newark :
John Wiley & Sons, Incorporated,
2018.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Cover; Half-Title Page; Title Page; Copyright Page; Contents; Preface; PART 1. Scientific Resources and Data Economy; 1. Data Production and Sharing: Towards a Universal Right?; 1.1. The right to knowledge today: between attempts at universalization and â#x80;#x9C;self-regulationâ#x80;#x9D; by the GAFA; 1.1.1. Towards the emergence of a universal right to knowledge subject to divergent economic thinking; 1.1.2. The recognition of a universal right to knowledge: a â#x80;#x9C;realistic utopiaâ#x80;#x9D;?; 1.2. Platform and scientific community rights: the absence of an upfront legal framework.
- 1.2.1. A system partly caused by the development of the digital sector1.2.2. The now-fragile law attempting to protect the results of research; 1.2.3. Intellectual property rights; 1.2.4. The notion of databases and protection by sui generis law; 1.2.5. Problems with the legal statute of knowledge; 1.3. The need to elaborate several types of legislation; 1.3.1. Platform rights; 1.3.2. Text and Data Mining: the great new stake; 1.4. Open Science: an achievable goal?; 2. Data: a Simple Raw Material?; 2.1. The new generation of data: management issues arising from ownership rights.
- 2.2. How to transform these data into knowledge?2.3. A new knowledge economy is necessary; 2.3.1. The information war and the stakes of data protection; 2.4. International scientific publishing: high added-value services and researcher community; 2.4.1. The open platform as the preferred tool for sharing and exploiting data; 2.4.2. An undeniable added value in processing data brought about by platforms; 3. New Knowledge Tools; 3.1. Sharing and uncertainty; 3.2. Platform construction; 3.3. Machine learning; 3.4. Promising progress to be qualifiedâ#x80;Œ; PART 2. The Knowledge Factory.
- 4. Economic Models of Knowledge Sharing4.1. A quick historic overview; 4.2. Property and/or sharing; 4.3. An immaterial good capable of fueling the production of material goods; 4.4. The large stakes of knowledge production; 4.4.1. Limits of this model: consistency, reliability and indistinction; 4.4.2. Business models of knowledge sharing; 4.4.3. Some numbers; 4.5. Development prospects allowing for new fields of study and more nimbly integrating researchers into the economic chain; 5. From the Author to the Valorizer.
- 5.1. The author and the valorizer: conciliation and efficiency of the interaction5.2. One point on patents; 5.3. The innovation cycle; 5.4. The law for a Digital Republic; 5.5. Scientific openness surpassing ancient legal tools; 6. Valorization: a Global Geopolitical Stake; 6.1. A multispeed competition; 6.1.1. The United States: a country losing its lead; 6.1.2. French stagnation; 6.1.3. The expanding Chinese model; 6.2. International cooperation in the scientific sector; 6.2.1. A developing European project; 6.2.2. International organizations; 7. Focus: the Chinese Patent Strategy.