FAIR Data Spaces: Difference between revisions

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===Description===
===Description===


The ability to exchange Data is becoming more important in many aspects of professional and social life - in research, mobility, health, energy, social media, and many more.
The ability to exchange data is becoming more important in many aspects of professional and social life - in research, mobility, health, energy, social media, and many more.
Hence efforts are underway to develop reliable infrastructure for data spaces - in Europe, this includes common shared data spaces such as GAIA-X, the European Open Science Cloud, the German National Research Data Infrastructure (NFDI), just to name a few.
Hence efforts are underway to develop reliable infrastructure for data spaces - in Europe, this includes common shared data spaces such as GAIA-X, the European Open Science Cloud, the German National Research Data Infrastructure (NFDI), just to name a few.
But importantly they all have an essential feature in common: FAIR data principles, which provide common semantics to build interoperable shared data spaces.
But importantly they all have an essential feature in common: FAIR data principles, which provide common semantics to build interoperable shared data spaces.

Revision as of 10:49, 30 August 2022

FAIR Data Spaces Now!

Date: 11/17/2022

Location: Online

Platform: tba

Description

The ability to exchange data is becoming more important in many aspects of professional and social life - in research, mobility, health, energy, social media, and many more. Hence efforts are underway to develop reliable infrastructure for data spaces - in Europe, this includes common shared data spaces such as GAIA-X, the European Open Science Cloud, the German National Research Data Infrastructure (NFDI), just to name a few. But importantly they all have an essential feature in common: FAIR data principles, which provide common semantics to build interoperable shared data spaces.

Speaker

Stefan Decker is a Professor of Databases and Information Systems at RWTH Aachen University and director of the Fraunhofer Institute for Applied Information Technology (FIT), which works on several data space initiatives. He previously was the director of DERI in Ireland, worked at Stanford University and the Information Sciences Institute (ISI), and worked on many seminal Semantic Web activities. He currently advises the German government within the National Council on Information Infrastructures (RfII).


Registration


External References

http://www.stefandecker.org