Rogue Scholar Posts

language
OPENNESSBIBLIOTHEKSWELTSERVICESOpen AccessLizenz:CC-BY-4.0-INTGerman
Published in TIB-Blog
Author Esther Tobschall, Holger Israel , Micky Lindlar

read this article in English Im Januar 2026 startet das neue Konsortium „PKP Open Journal Systems Deutschland 2026–2028“. 14 Einrichtungen aus Deutschland haben gemeinsam ihre Unterstützung für das Public Knowledge Project (PKP) erklärt und sich für die nächsten drei Jahre zu Mitgliedsbeiträgen verpflichtet. Auf diese Weise tragen sie zur nachhaltigen und gemeinsamen Finanzierung relevanter Open-Access-Infrastruktur bei.

DataCite CommonsMetadataProduct
Published in DataCite Blog - DataCite
Author DataCite Staff

DataCite brings together descriptive metadata for millions of research outputs, resources, and activities, serving systems across the world that rely on DataCite for high-quality metadata to put research in context and enable downstream discovery, reuse, and impact. As a vital source of open data and a foundational infrastructure provider, we are committed to making DataCite metadata as open and as usable as possible.

Rogue ScholarOpen Infrastructure
Published in Front Matter

Like most digital infrastructure nowadays, Rogue Scholar and the underlying digital repository platform InvenioRDM are built and deployed using Docker containers. There are many ways to orchestrate (manage) Docker containers; two common options are Docker Compose for local development and Kubernetes for production infrastructure.

A Multipolar Art World
Published in carrier-bag.net
Author Reena Devi

Kathryn Bigelow’s latest film, A House Built On Dynamite, opens with the kind of dread that has long haunted American imagination: a nuclear missile, origin unknown, tearing toward the United States. No one can stop it. Not even the country’s own Ground-Based Interceptor missiles, whose accuracy is as disputed as the… The post Who Are We In A World Built On Algorithms & Dynamite? appeared first on carrier-bag.net.

Filesharing + StreamingGenerative KIKreativwirtschaftKünstliche IntelligenzMusik + MP3German
Published in iRights.info
Author Betim Neziraj

Im Verfahren der Musikverwertungsgesellschaft GEMA gegen die ChatGPT-Betreiberin OpenAI hat das Landgericht München I entschieden. Dieses Urteil könnte weitreichende Konsequenzen für sämtliche KI-Betreiber wie auch für Urheberinnen nach sich ziehen. Betim Neziraj erläutert die Gerichtsentscheidung.