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Intellectual Property Rights in Ethically Open Science

In this lecture, Teresa Scassa examines the complex role of intellectual property(IP) rights in the creation and advancement of academic knowledge. While IP rights can create barriers to access, reuse and transparency, she argues, they can also further creativity and innovation by providing revenue, and by protecting other values such as privacy/confidentiality, and integrity/authenticity. IP rights can also, in some circumstances, protect against the exploitation of individuals and communities. Framing IP rights in terms of a sometimes complex web of relationships, this presentation asks what role IP rights should play in ethically open science.

This presentation was made at the DARIAH Annual Event 2018, held in Paris on May 22-24, which had Open Science as its theme.

Cite as

(2019). Intellectual Property Rights in Ethically Open Science. Version 1.0.0. DARIAH-Campus. [Video]. http://localhost:3000/id/P089MgRgIKG3rOczZuQ5V

Reuse conditions

Resources hosted on DARIAH-Campus are subjects to the DARIAH-Campus Training Materials Reuse Charter

Full metadata

Title:
Intellectual Property Rights in Ethically Open Science
Authors:
Domain:
Social Sciences and Humanities
Language:
en
Published to DARIAH-Campus:
8/16/2019
Content type:
Video
Licence:
CCBY 4.0
Sources:
DARIAH
Topics:
Open access, Open science
Version:
1.0.0