Description

Book Synopsis

This book explores how the technical upheavals of the 21st century have changed the structures and architecture of the creation, sharing and regulation of knowledge. From the new economic and technical models of production and dissemination of knowledge, the book deals with all new forms of valorisation. It also explains how the legislative deficit in the world and in Europe, around digital is being filled by new initiatives, such as the law for a Digital Republic, in France. It is therefore a book that provides a valuable follow-up to the book "The New Challenges of Knowledge", of which it constitutes the continuation and operational deepening.



Table of Contents

Preface xi
Renaud FABRE and Alain BENSOUSSAN

Part 1. Scientific Resources and Data Economy 1

Chapter 1. Data Production and Sharing: Towards a Universal Right? 3
Marie BLANQUART, Thomas DESCOUS and Ewen HUET

1.1. The right to knowledge today: between attempts at universalization and “self-regulation” by the GAFA 4

1.1.1. Towards the emergence of a universal right to knowledge subject to divergent economic thinking 5

1.1.2. The recognition of a universal right to knowledge: a “realistic utopia”? 6

1.2. Platform and scientific community rights: the absence of an upfront legal framework 7

1.2.1. A system partly caused by the development of the digital sector 7

1.2.2. The now-fragile law attempting to protect the results of research 8

1.2.3. Intellectual property rights 8

1.2.4. The notion of databases and protection by sui generis law 9

1.2.5. Problems with the legal statute of knowledge 11

1.3. The need to elaborate several types of legislation 12

1.3.1. Platform rights 12

1.3.2. Text and Data Mining: the great new stake 14

1.4. Open Science: an achievable goal? 15

Chapter 2. Data: a Simple Raw Material? 19
Bertrand PELETIER and Thomas DESCOUS

2.1. The new generation of data: management issues arising from ownership rights 19

2.2. How to transform these data into knowledge? 20

2.3. A new knowledge economy is necessary 21

2.3.1. The information war and the stakes of data protection 21

2.4. International scientific publishing: high added-value services and researcher community 22

2.4.1. The open platform as the preferred tool for sharing and exploiting data 22

2.4.2. An undeniable added value in processing data brought about by platforms 24

Chapter 3. New Knowledge Tools 27
Christoph LOHSCHELDER

3.1. Sharing and uncertainty 27

3.2. Platform construction 28

3.3. Machine learning 30

3.4. Promising progress to be qualified… 31

Part 2. The Knowledge Factory 33

Chapter 4. Economic Models of Knowledge Sharing 35
Vincent GIACOBBI

4.1. A quick historic overview 35

4.2. Property and/or sharing 35

4.3. An immaterial good capable of fueling the production of material goods 37

4.4. The large stakes of knowledge production 38

4.4.1. Limits of this model: consistency, reliability and indistinction 39

4.4.2. Business models of knowledge sharing 39

4.4.3. Some numbers 40

4.5. Development prospects allowing for new fields of study and more nimbly integrating researchers into the economic chain 41

Chapter 5. From the Author to the Valorizer 43
Lucile COLLIN

5.1. The author and the valorizer: conciliation and efficiency of the interaction 43

5.2. One point on patents 44

5.3. The innovation cycle 45

5.4. The law for a Digital Republic 46

5.5. Scientific openness surpassing ancient legal tools 48

Chapter 6. Valorization: a Global Geopolitical Stake 51
Marie BLANQUART

6.1. A multispeed competition 51

6.1.1. The United States: a country losing its lead 51

6.1.2. French stagnation 53

6.1.3. The expanding Chinese model 54

6.2. International cooperation in the scientific sector 57

6.2.1. A developing European project 57

6.2.2. International organizations 58

Chapter 7. Focus: the Chinese Patent Strategy 61
Vincent GIACOBBI

7.1. Chinese expansion 62

7.2. An inflation of Chinese patents 63

7.3. Some fallbacks in China nuancing its strategic position 65

7.3.1. A fallback in favor of applied research 66

7.3.2. Territorial withdrawal 66

7.3.3. A long certification process with uncertain ends 66

7.3.4. The procedure for submitting a dispute on a patent 67

7.4. Contestable and contested digital supremacy 68

Chapter 8. Artificial Intelligence Policies 71
Maximilian NOMINACHER and Bertrand PELETIER

8.1. Policies concerning “strong” AI 72

8.2. Policies concerning “weak” AI 72

8.3. Policies concerning artificial intelligence safety 74

8.4. From practice to ethics: what is AI’s legal status? 75

Chapter 9. New Formulations of Results and New “Markets” 77
Louki-Géronimo RICHOU

9.1. Making universal: establishing common standards of expression 78

9.1.1. Requirement of uniqueness 79

9.1.2. Hierarchy requirement 79

9.2. To adapt: from popularization to simplification 82

9.2.1. Versatility or specialization? 83

9.2.2. Simplifying rather than popularizing 84

9.2.3. Measures following the precautionary principle: archiving and protection 85

9.2.4. Preserving the researcher while optimizing knowledge for the general interest during the digital era 85

9.3. Developing the general state of knowledge with care 87

Chapter 10. Open Science: a Common Good that Needs to be Valued? 89
Nicolas MASSEREAU

10.1. A global challenge that must take the economy into account 90

10.2. A wide variety of public policies respond to this challenge 90

10.2.1. Enterprises and States 90

10.2.2. Valorization as a junction point 91

10.2.3. Basic research: competing with applied research? 93

10.3. The French case and international rankings 94

10.4. The limits of the patent system and publication count 96

10.5. Investment tools aiming to correct these failures 98

10.6. How to measure innovation? 100

10.6.1. The university: the first knowledge production framework recognized by law 100

10.6.2. Research data: a new intangible “place” for producing knowledge 101

10.7. The application of research is not an end in itself 102

Conclusion 105
Renaud FABRE and Alain BENSOUSSAN

Appendices 109

Appendix 1. Extract from the CNRS White Paper: “The Work of Science and the Digital Field: Data, Publications, Platforms. A Systematic Analysis of the Law for a Digital Republic” 111

Appendix 2. Extract from the CNRS White Paper “Open Science in a Digital Republic: Studies and Proposals for Law Application. Strategic

Application Guide” 161

Bibliography 179

List of Authors 183

Index 185

The Digital Factory for Knowledge: Production and

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      Publisher: ISTE Ltd and John Wiley & Sons Inc
      Publication Date: 09/03/2018
      ISBN13: 9781786302410, 978-1786302410
      ISBN10: 1786302411

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      This book explores how the technical upheavals of the 21st century have changed the structures and architecture of the creation, sharing and regulation of knowledge. From the new economic and technical models of production and dissemination of knowledge, the book deals with all new forms of valorisation. It also explains how the legislative deficit in the world and in Europe, around digital is being filled by new initiatives, such as the law for a Digital Republic, in France. It is therefore a book that provides a valuable follow-up to the book "The New Challenges of Knowledge", of which it constitutes the continuation and operational deepening.



      Table of Contents

      Preface xi
      Renaud FABRE and Alain BENSOUSSAN

      Part 1. Scientific Resources and Data Economy 1

      Chapter 1. Data Production and Sharing: Towards a Universal Right? 3
      Marie BLANQUART, Thomas DESCOUS and Ewen HUET

      1.1. The right to knowledge today: between attempts at universalization and “self-regulation” by the GAFA 4

      1.1.1. Towards the emergence of a universal right to knowledge subject to divergent economic thinking 5

      1.1.2. The recognition of a universal right to knowledge: a “realistic utopia”? 6

      1.2. Platform and scientific community rights: the absence of an upfront legal framework 7

      1.2.1. A system partly caused by the development of the digital sector 7

      1.2.2. The now-fragile law attempting to protect the results of research 8

      1.2.3. Intellectual property rights 8

      1.2.4. The notion of databases and protection by sui generis law 9

      1.2.5. Problems with the legal statute of knowledge 11

      1.3. The need to elaborate several types of legislation 12

      1.3.1. Platform rights 12

      1.3.2. Text and Data Mining: the great new stake 14

      1.4. Open Science: an achievable goal? 15

      Chapter 2. Data: a Simple Raw Material? 19
      Bertrand PELETIER and Thomas DESCOUS

      2.1. The new generation of data: management issues arising from ownership rights 19

      2.2. How to transform these data into knowledge? 20

      2.3. A new knowledge economy is necessary 21

      2.3.1. The information war and the stakes of data protection 21

      2.4. International scientific publishing: high added-value services and researcher community 22

      2.4.1. The open platform as the preferred tool for sharing and exploiting data 22

      2.4.2. An undeniable added value in processing data brought about by platforms 24

      Chapter 3. New Knowledge Tools 27
      Christoph LOHSCHELDER

      3.1. Sharing and uncertainty 27

      3.2. Platform construction 28

      3.3. Machine learning 30

      3.4. Promising progress to be qualified… 31

      Part 2. The Knowledge Factory 33

      Chapter 4. Economic Models of Knowledge Sharing 35
      Vincent GIACOBBI

      4.1. A quick historic overview 35

      4.2. Property and/or sharing 35

      4.3. An immaterial good capable of fueling the production of material goods 37

      4.4. The large stakes of knowledge production 38

      4.4.1. Limits of this model: consistency, reliability and indistinction 39

      4.4.2. Business models of knowledge sharing 39

      4.4.3. Some numbers 40

      4.5. Development prospects allowing for new fields of study and more nimbly integrating researchers into the economic chain 41

      Chapter 5. From the Author to the Valorizer 43
      Lucile COLLIN

      5.1. The author and the valorizer: conciliation and efficiency of the interaction 43

      5.2. One point on patents 44

      5.3. The innovation cycle 45

      5.4. The law for a Digital Republic 46

      5.5. Scientific openness surpassing ancient legal tools 48

      Chapter 6. Valorization: a Global Geopolitical Stake 51
      Marie BLANQUART

      6.1. A multispeed competition 51

      6.1.1. The United States: a country losing its lead 51

      6.1.2. French stagnation 53

      6.1.3. The expanding Chinese model 54

      6.2. International cooperation in the scientific sector 57

      6.2.1. A developing European project 57

      6.2.2. International organizations 58

      Chapter 7. Focus: the Chinese Patent Strategy 61
      Vincent GIACOBBI

      7.1. Chinese expansion 62

      7.2. An inflation of Chinese patents 63

      7.3. Some fallbacks in China nuancing its strategic position 65

      7.3.1. A fallback in favor of applied research 66

      7.3.2. Territorial withdrawal 66

      7.3.3. A long certification process with uncertain ends 66

      7.3.4. The procedure for submitting a dispute on a patent 67

      7.4. Contestable and contested digital supremacy 68

      Chapter 8. Artificial Intelligence Policies 71
      Maximilian NOMINACHER and Bertrand PELETIER

      8.1. Policies concerning “strong” AI 72

      8.2. Policies concerning “weak” AI 72

      8.3. Policies concerning artificial intelligence safety 74

      8.4. From practice to ethics: what is AI’s legal status? 75

      Chapter 9. New Formulations of Results and New “Markets” 77
      Louki-Géronimo RICHOU

      9.1. Making universal: establishing common standards of expression 78

      9.1.1. Requirement of uniqueness 79

      9.1.2. Hierarchy requirement 79

      9.2. To adapt: from popularization to simplification 82

      9.2.1. Versatility or specialization? 83

      9.2.2. Simplifying rather than popularizing 84

      9.2.3. Measures following the precautionary principle: archiving and protection 85

      9.2.4. Preserving the researcher while optimizing knowledge for the general interest during the digital era 85

      9.3. Developing the general state of knowledge with care 87

      Chapter 10. Open Science: a Common Good that Needs to be Valued? 89
      Nicolas MASSEREAU

      10.1. A global challenge that must take the economy into account 90

      10.2. A wide variety of public policies respond to this challenge 90

      10.2.1. Enterprises and States 90

      10.2.2. Valorization as a junction point 91

      10.2.3. Basic research: competing with applied research? 93

      10.3. The French case and international rankings 94

      10.4. The limits of the patent system and publication count 96

      10.5. Investment tools aiming to correct these failures 98

      10.6. How to measure innovation? 100

      10.6.1. The university: the first knowledge production framework recognized by law 100

      10.6.2. Research data: a new intangible “place” for producing knowledge 101

      10.7. The application of research is not an end in itself 102

      Conclusion 105
      Renaud FABRE and Alain BENSOUSSAN

      Appendices 109

      Appendix 1. Extract from the CNRS White Paper: “The Work of Science and the Digital Field: Data, Publications, Platforms. A Systematic Analysis of the Law for a Digital Republic” 111

      Appendix 2. Extract from the CNRS White Paper “Open Science in a Digital Republic: Studies and Proposals for Law Application. Strategic

      Application Guide” 161

      Bibliography 179

      List of Authors 183

      Index 185

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