Posts Tagged ‘Open Access’
Who Owns Our Knowledge?: How ORCID iDs, DOIs, and Other PIDs Help Researchers Protect and Share Their Work
This year’s International Open Access Week asks the question: “Who owns our knowledge?” For researchers, this question can be personal. You generate new insights, data, and publications — but in an increasingly digital and global research ecosystem, how do you ensure your contributions are recognized, connected, and reusable? A part of the solution relates to…
Read MoreBeyond Access: Caring for the Knowledge We Share – Open Access Week 2025
Every October, libraries, researchers, and institutions around the world celebrate International Open Access Week, reminding us to think about how we share knowledge and who gets to access it. This year’s theme, “Who Owns Our Knowledge?”, feels especially timely. It asks how, in a time of disruption, communities can take back control over the knowledge…
Read MoreOpen Access Week 2025 – When AI Learns From Our Knowledge
Open Access has always been about removing barriers to make research, data, and ideas freely available for anyone to learn from. But as artificial intelligence systems start learning from that same openness, we’re faced with the question: Who owns our knowledge? AI developers are increasingly training large language models on massive collections of online material,…
Read MoreNewest Open Access publishing opportunities + OA Week 2025
On this Open Access Week 2025, Researchers want to know, “Where can I publish my research article Open Access and free-of-charge?” The answer to this question in Woods Hole grows in the number of journal titles offering OA each year, although the list of titles is by no means a comprehensive list. The MBLWHOI…
Read MoreMid-year 2024 look at new open access publishing opportunities
Written by: Matthew Person Last Fall we reported on OA publishing opportunities for MBLWHOI Library served Woods Hole scientists (at MBL, WHOI, SEA, USGS, and WCRC.) Here’s a quick mid-year update: The American Society for Microbiology journal titles (with one exception, Molecular and Cellular Biology) will in 2025 become part of the S2O, (“Subscribe to…
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