From September 16 to 18, 2019, more than 300 participants convened in the beautiful city of Porto (POR) for the second instalment of the OpenScienceFAIR. One of the major themes of this year's conference revolved around all things EOSC - focusing on the European Open Science Cloud and corresponding questions around its future shape and form, and two joint workshops were organized by OpenAIRE and EOSC-hub.
With more than 70 participants, the workshop highlighted the strong interest that the European Open Science Cloud generates among the Open Science community and a variety of stakeholder groups, ranging from Libraries to research institutions, infrastructure providers and policymakers.
Ultimately, these two workshops held at the OpenScienceFAIR 2019 showcase the importance of both infrastructures working closely together to:
- Invite key stakeholders from both communities to discuss how to implement EOSC, building upon experiences, services and infrastructure that already exists in the EU member states
- Identify national counterparts in Open Science and infrastructures respectively
- Provide a forum for much needed joined-up discussion and ways forward
Feedback collected from participants of both workshops showed that many see it crucial that EOSC and its constituent initiatives make people explicitly aware of the benefits that the European Open Science Cloud will bring for research communities and other stakeholders on local, national and European levels.
The propositions discussed included:
- Conducting a gap analysis to identify overlaps and blind spots between the participating initiatives,
- further opening up the development of a shared vision via open consultation (similar to Plan S).
- EOSC-portal: focus on key services, more active promotion of the portal, highlight benefits that set it apart from e.g. commercial services (e.g. data security, open source, open data, etc.)
- Further increase transparency of the governance model, in particular with respect to the Working Groups
- Communicate more clearly how issues of sustainability (e.g. what happens after 2020?), rules of participation and onboarding of new initiatives
- Build on existing content and strategies
- With a particular focus on FAIR data, recommendations were sorted in seven categories, including certification, essential infrastructure components, data stewardship, costs and rewards, collaboration and support, and data management. The full report on FAIR data, provided by OpenAIRE, FAIRsFAIR, RDA Europe, FREYA and EOSC-hub is available here.
Further to that, it was highlighted that outreach to, and active engagement of universities, research institutions and libraries could still be improved upon, and that these are seen as key stakeholders of not only promoting EOSC, but the more general idea of Open Science practices behind it.
All in all, these two workshops highlighted the benefits as well as the challenges that lie ahead of us all working towards a European Open Science Cloud. It also became imminently visible that collaboration between OpenAIRE and EOSC-hub is key to making this a reality.