From Open Access to Open Science thomas.margoni@glasgow.ac.uk A European legal perspective with a specific focus on licensing OpenAccess Week OpenAire Seminars Dr. Thomas Margoni Senior Lecturer in Intellectual Property and Internet Law Director of the LLM in Intellectual Property and the Digital Economy School of Law – CREATe Centre – University of Glasgow Legal Coordinator OpenMinTeD Open Access thomas.margoni@glasgow.ac.uk “… free availability on the public internet, permitting any users to read, download, copy, distribute, print, search, or link to the full texts of these articles, crawl them for indexing, pass them as data to software, or use them for any other lawful purpose, without financial, legal, or technical barriers other than those inseparable from gaining access to the internet itself. The only constraint on reproduction and distribution, and the only role for copyright in this domain, should be to give authors control over the integrity of their work and the right to be properly acknowledged and cited” (Budapest Open Access Initiative) Possible Issues 1) Copyright exists in most cases where articles, publications, datasets, etc are created; 2) SGDR and other rights even in absence of originality; 3) Limited and fragmented presence of ELCs, absence of broad standards such as fair use in US 4) Other legal hurdles 5) Licences may work but are not the perfect solution 6) Examples thomas.margoni@glasgow.ac.uk Legal barriers Copyright and rights related to copyright (e.g. Sui generis database right (SGDR)) ● These rights usually restrict the reproduction (copy) and distribution of protected works and databases with substantial investment (e.g. Art 2 InfoSoc Directive and Arts. 5 and 7 Database Directive) ● Problem: reproduction is defined very broadly by EU law (any temporary or permanent copy of the whole or part of a work, etc); SGDR restricts copies of substantial parts and repeated copies of insubstantial parts ● Therefore any TDM (or any other act) which requires any temporary copy of the original work or DB or part thereof infringes protected works and/or SGDR ● Privacy/data protection Protects personal data (e.g. databases containing names, addresses, age, sex, etc). One of the most important elements is the concept of consent: data subject can give consent for treatment of his/her data (e.g. in a DB). But such consent needs to be specific for a purpose. Consent cannot be given for any type of use (like e.g. copyright licences). Therefore, all data subjects may have to give their consent for every new use, something difficult to foresee in an open research environment (Open Science) ● PSI Public Sector Information legislation is based on a different paradigm than other approaches (e.g. U.S. where works of Federal Government are not protected in the U.S.). PSI 2013 has an “open by default” approach but copyright and other similar rights and personal data are object of specific exclusion and therefore PB are under no obligation to make them accessible and/or reusable. Plus, FoA remains MS competence. ● Contracts/terms of use Even when no rights exist on a specific BD (because there is no originality, no substantial investment, no personal data, etc) terms of use of data provider may restrict use and redistribution of DB. This limitation is based on a contractual relationship but is still an enforceable obligation (although there are differences). See ECJ in Ryanair v PR Aviation thomas.margoni@glasgow.ac.uk Exceptions to legal barriers: ● Copyright and rights related to copyright ● Exception and limitations to copyright (ELC), fair dealing, fair use. ELC are only partially harmonised (e.g. in EU 1 mandatory plus 20 at discretion of MS). Internationally, even more differences. ● For TDM in EU possible exception for research and teaching. Problem: it is not uniformly implemented in all MS and it is often limited to partial copies. It is also limited to non commercial activities and only for illustration for teaching and research. Art. 5(1) is mandatory but limited in scope. Absence of general open norm (e.g. US fair use; UK fair dealing is narrower) ● Recently, UK introduced a limitation to copyright and related rights for acts of TDM for non commercial purposes and for legally accessed sources on the basis of the EU ELC for research. In draft for a Directive for Copyright in DSM EC has introduced a mandatory TDM exception, not limited by contracts (but yes by TPM) which is only available to research organisations (contrast this with e.g. US where most TDM are considered “transformative” uses, therefore covered by fair use). ● Privacy/data protection Anonymisation of data (removal of personal data) but this is time/money consuming and may reduce the usefulness of DB ● PSI PSI legislation does not affect FoA (Freedom of Access) legislation which is MS power. But if MS empower FoA legislation then PSI “reusable by default” rule applies. However, limitation regarding copyright and personal data still applies ● Contracts/terms of use These are private agreements so there are no real exceptions. However, certain regulations (antitrust, abusive clauses, consumer protection) could under certain circumstances invalidate specific terms. This is however a case per case issue and does not seem to constitute a sound course of action. thomas.margoni@glasgow.ac.uk Licences and licence compatibility ● Licences are permissions/authorisations (contract or otherwise based) that allow one or more parties to perform certain activities. ● Licences (so called esp. in the field of copyright) may be directed to a plurality of subjects and be drafted in standard forms or had hoc ● Some licences are usually called public licences (e.g. CCPL = Creative Commons Public Licence, GPL = General Public Licence, etc). ● In certain fields Open Content Licences (e.g. CCPL, CC0, EPL, etc) are used to grant a permission to perform acts (copy, redistribute, modify, etc) in relation to a work of authorship or other subject matter (e.g. a DB), under certain conditions (Attribution, Non Derivatives, Share Alike, Non Commercial, etc). ● A possible problem is “licence proliferation”, i.e. too many (and possibly incompatible) licences. Therefore, there is a general consensus that new licences should not be created unless really necessary. ● Some projects (e.g. OpenMinTeD, OpenAire) promote Legal Interoperability through analysis of legal documents and compatibility matrix. thomas.margoni@glasgow.ac.uk Inner limits of licences ● Licences are a powerful instrument but not perfect… ● “Private ordering tool” i.e. can we entrust a private law tool with a function that should be a matter of public interest/intervention (wider access to knowledge)? ● Licences are a voluntary tool, i.e. only if the owner of Work/DB is willing to grant you access, licences work. If work owner says no, there is no remedy based on contracts that can force him/her to deal with you. ● Even if DB is willing to employ licences, very often there are problems of correct labelling (legal code, metadata, etc) of resources. This is a very serious issue faced in many projects in TDM and in science/academia. thomas.margoni@glasgow.ac.uk Policy recommendations best practices ● Through proper policy choices some of other disadvantages can be fixed. ● Recommending 1 or a very limited no. of licences which are compatible (fixing problem of licence incompatibility) ● Crucial importance that data providers, funding agencies, scientific and public institutions require use of correct licences and subject grants or funding to the correct implementation of those licences (fixing problems of “voluntarity” and “labeling”) ● Influence public debate so that legislative intervention in the field is appropriate (e.g. definition of right of reproduction, harmonisation of ELC, need of a broader standard for ELC, limit of non commercial exception such as in UK). ● Many projects in EU (e.g. OpenMinTeD) focus on OA resources given the complex legal issues (market failure?) connected with TDM. thomas.margoni@glasgow.ac.uk Policies, best practices and OA requirements Examples: ● H2020 funded projects must be published in OA ● H2020 has also an OA data pilot which should become non optional ● National funding bodies and assessing bodies only consider OA publications for grant applications or for tenure, scientific assessment, promotions, etc. ● Scientific foundations require OA publishing. thomas.margoni@glasgow.ac.uk Open Access Often this contrast with traditional academic publishing where publishers commonly require a copyright transfer/exclusive licence from the authors in order to build a business model based on paid distribution of hard copies or access to online versions thomas.margoni@glasgow.ac.uk Open Access Some countries (e.g. DE, NL) create a termination of transfer of rights in order to republish in OA (although with limitations) Other countries pass laws that are hard to assess due to the fact that it is hard to understand the intended legal effect (don’t address IP) and the recipients of the legal obligation (e.g. IT, ES). thomas.margoni@glasgow.ac.uk Open Access But there is more, e.g. ● Open Methodology (reproduceability of scientific results and preregistration) ● Open Peer-review (biases in the composition of reviewing committees and influence of “schools”) ● Open Citations (lock-in of scientific databases and lack of transparency) ● Open Data (SGDR and non protected DB and protection of non original data) ● FLOSS (software as results and as tools) thomas.margoni@glasgow.ac.uk Is this still just about (open) Access? This is much more, not only access to science but about science itself: Open Science thomas.margoni@glasgow.ac.uk From Open Access to Open Science Open Science includes all these features: Open Access, open methodology, open peer review, open citations, etc. And has a number of goals: ● Efficiency ● Transparency ● Accountability ● Impact ● Diffusion ● Access ● Innovation thomas.margoni@glasgow.ac.uk Open Science Is it/should it be more than an umbrella concept? Propositive concept that not only collects the concepts aforementioned but offers guidance and value-based normative concept about how rules and norms within science should be regulated thomas.margoni@glasgow.ac.uk Open Science and IP In the field of IP (copyright) we should consider the following: ● 1 Subject matter (copyright at all?) ● 2 Authorship and Ownership (who should own scientific outputs and results) ● 3 Rights (should right of reproduction be as broad as it is now? Communications to the public? Modification?) ● 4 Exceptions and limitations (new paradigm?) ● 5 Relationship between copyright, contracts and scientific norms ● 6 Reconceputalisation of the relationship between authors’ rights and users’ rights thomas.margoni@glasgow.ac.uk Example: OpenMinTeD ● The global research community generates over 1.5 million new scholarly articles per annum. The STM report (2009) ● … some 90% of papers … are never cited. … 50% of papers are never read by anyone other than their authors, referees and journal editorsLokman I. Meho, The rise and rise of citation analysis, 2007 ● … one paper published every 30 seconds Spangler et al, Automated Hypothesis Generation based on Mining Scientific Literature, 2014 From: OpenMinTeD 2016 thomas.margoni@glasgow.ac.uk Example: OpenMinTeD Machine reading process textual sources, organise and classify in various dimensions, extract main (indexical) information items, … and “understanding” identify and extract entities and relations between entities, facilitate the transformation of unstructured textual sources into structured data … and predicting enable the multidimensional analysis of structured data to extract meaningful insights and improve the ability to predict thomas.margoni@glasgow.ac.uk Example: OpenMinTeD thomas.margoni@glasgow.ac.uk https://openminted.github.io/releases/license-matrix/ Example: OpenMinTeD thomas.margoni@glasgow.ac.uk https://zenodo.org/record/841086#.WYwTWYpLdE4 https://zenodo.org/record/840652#.WYwTcopLdE6 Example: OpenMinTeD thomas.margoni@glasgow.ac.uk Example: Open Science check list for repositories thomas.margoni@glasgow.ac.uk 1) Apply the right licence to your repository 2) Don’t forget the metadata 3) Apply the right licence also to the content of your repository (not the same thing as point 1)! 4) In particular, CC BY 4.0 for works such as papers, articles, monographs, creative images, etc) 5) Data and dataset should be under a CC0 (or a Public Domain Dedication) 6) Require that uploaders choose a licence when they upload their content 7) Suggest which licence should be chosen in order to meet OS requirements (see above) 8) Explain why what you recommend is the best choice and why other choices are not good but let uploaders choose Open Science Thanks! thomas.margoni@glasgow.ac.uk @openminted_eu thomas.margoni@glasgow.ac.uk