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Open research

Beethoven once wrote "There should be only one repository of art in the world, to which the artist would donate his works in order to take what he would need". We are trying to build such an open repository for scientific research.

An introduction into Open research and the concept of Beethoven's open repository of research (or a GitHub for science). You can support the project by donating to it or by spreading the link to rockethub.com/​projects/​3755-beethoven-s-open-repository-of-research .

License: CC0/Public Domain.

Open research is the concept of scientists sharing their research with the world as soon as they record it for themselves. This is essential to make research more efficient than it is today.

Research resembles a puzzle: a heap of pieces has to be assembled into a coherent picture.

Yet some of the pieces are unknown, and traditional non-open science keeps much of the remainder hidden behind barriers erected by pre-digital reputation and reward systems.

Open science means tackling research problems collaboratively by sharing research tools, data, materials and code as they arise and by building on the shared work.

As Beethoven said, "There should be only one repository of research in the world, to which the artist would donate his works in order to take what he would need.“

Ideally, scientific research would be in the Public Domain by default, and Beethoven's repository would be federated rather than centralized.

Concept: M. Fabiana Kubke and Daniel Mietchen
Artwork: Perrin Ireland
Editing: Nick Navatta
alphachimp.com

Music: Ludwig van Beethoven, Sonata No. 22 in F Major, op. 54
musopen.org/​music/​piece/​725 - available under a CC0/Public Domain License

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This collection, Communicating research as Beethoven suggested, by Open research - grant proposal now part of the #SciFund challenge at RocketHub, is free of known copyright restrictions.