[Vp-integration-subgroup] Licensing issues

Rahuman Sheriff sheriff at ebi.ac.uk
Mon Jan 25 16:10:20 PST 2021


Dear Robin and Jacob,
I am happy to support, if you would like the model to be deposited to BioModels repository [1].
Not only the models gets higher visibility, it might be potentially curated and annotated and therefore can attract higher citation.

Best regards
Sheriff

[1] https://academic.oup.com/nar/article/48/D1/D407/5614569

> On 24 Jan 2021, at 18:05, Robin Thompson <robin.thompson1988 at gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> Hi Jacob,
> 
> Thanks for your email. I have asked the relevant person at Oxford University (the institution I was at when this research was undertaken), and I will let you know when I hear back from them.
> 
> Thanks, and best wishes,
> Robin
> 
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------
> Dr Robin Thompson
> Assistant Professor of Mathematical Epidemiology
> Mathematics Institute
> University of Warwick, UK
> www.robin-thompson.co.uk <http://www.robin-thompson.co.uk/>
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------
> 
>> On 22 Jan 2021, at 20:37, Jacob Barhak <jacob.barhak at gmail.com <mailto:jacob.barhak at gmail.com>> wrote:
>> 
>> Hi Robin, and anyone else who wants to comment, 
>> 
>> When integrating your model, you may recall I asked for permissions to use it and mentioned licensing issues.
>> 
>> One of your responses was that you have to check with your institution regarding commercial use while you yourself were ok with me reusing your model and had no restrictions.
>> 
>> I wish to explore the licensing issue in this mailing list to show what are approaches of different institutions and individuals to the problem.
>> 
>> Is it possible for you to check about the policy in your institution? The idea is to show some examples of how institutions approach the issue. For example, do they delegate the decision to researchers? Do they have a policy about who holds the copyright? How do they treat commercial entities?
>> 
>> I know in the US, a faculty member in most cases retains rights for their work, this does not always extend to staff and I am not sure about students. I also know that some academic institutions support tech transfer through patents and other endeavours. 
>> 
>> I was trying to discuss licenses here:
>> https://forum.comses.net/t/issues-with-regard-to-call-for-transparency-of-covid-19-models/8433 <https://forum.comses.net/t/issues-with-regard-to-call-for-transparency-of-covid-19-models/8433> 
>> 
>> Yet this discussion was not concluded. 
>> 
>> One notable approach that Sheriff made me aware of is taken by BioModels:
>> http://www.ebi.ac.uk/biomodels/faq <http://www.ebi.ac.uk/biomodels/faq>
>> They avoid the licensing issues by making all models available under CC0
>> 
>> I am showing here some aspects of the issue and asking for you to check with your institution to explore all aspects of this issue so we can properly report those in the white paper.
>> 
>>            Jacob
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
> 

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