To endorse the Panton Principles please fill in your details below. If you'd like to add your organisation to the list of signatories, please email info [at] okfn [dot] org.

Name:

E-mail address:

Affiliation:

Country:

Please enter an optional comment:

Do not display name on website:

Jonathan Gray, Open Knowledge Foundation, UK

John Bywater, ASF,

Michael Nielsen, , Canada

Heather Piwowar, U of Pittsburgh, USA

Michele Mattioni, EBML-EBI, U.K.

Bill Hooker, , USA

Alma Swan, Key Perspectives Ltd, UK

Egon Willighagen, Uppsala University, Sweden

Pawel Szczesny, Institute of Biochemistry and Biophysics & University of Warsaw, Poland

Glyn Moody, , UK

James Casbon, Open Knowledge Foundation, UK

Ignasi Labastida, Universitat de Barcelona, Catalonia

S. (Sam) Kritikos, , Greece

Yaroslav Nikolaev, University of Basel, Switzerland

Daniel Mietchen, University of Jena, Germany

Andy Powell, Eduserv, UK

Simon Coles, University of Southampton, UK

Leslie Carr, EPrints Services, UK

Stuart Macdonald, University of Edinburgh, Scotland

Stian Haklev, University of Toronto, Peer2Peer University, Norway

Walter Jessen, , USA

Adrian Pohl, , Germany

Stefano Costa, Università degli Studi di Siena, Italy

Alen C. Franco, , España

Neil Saunders, , Australia

Raúl Martín, Universidad de Salamanca, España

John S. Erickson, Ph.D., Bitwacker Associates, USA
I strongly endorse the Panton Principles, especially the core principle that the "...legal status of scientific datasets should be made explicit and that content licenses are not appropriate for data..."

Pierre Lindenbaum, CEPH, France

Andrew Lang, Oral Roberts University, USA

Claudia Koltzenburg, Hamburg University, Germany

Peter Troxler, , The Netherlands

Jean-Claude Bradley, Drexel University, USA

Dorothea Salo, , United States of America

Peter Suber, Berkman Center, Harvard University, USA

Maarten, Media researcher, Netherlands

Thomas Kluyver, University of Sheffield, UK

patrick john hayes, Florida IHMC, USA

Dr Klaus Graf, RWTH Aachen, Germany

Konrad Förstner, , Germany

Matthew Federici, Drexel University, USA

xxxxxxxx, , USA

Graham Steel, CJD Alliance, United Kingdom

Darin L. Stewart, Oregon Health & Science University, USA

Björn Brembs, Freie Universität Berlin, Germany

Michael Witbrock, Cycorp Europe, Slovenia
Non free "share alike" and "non commercial" licences are one of the greatest barriers to AI research. Let's get rid of them.

Dan Gezelter, The OpenScience Project, USA

Bernard Vatant, Mondeca, France

Abhihske Tiwari, The University of Auckland, New Zealand

Daniel Hagon, , UK

Sebastian Pochert, Pirate Party Germany, Germany

Josep Massaneda-Clares, pharmacist, Catalonia-Spain

Steven J. Koch, University of New Mexico, USA

Samuel Lampa, Uppsala University, Sweden

Lee Dirks, Microsoft Research, USA

Hanns-Jörg Rohwedder, , Germany

Alex Wade, Microsoft Research, USA

Robert H. McDonald, Indiana University, USA

Antony Williams, Royal Society of Chemistry, UK

Leigh Blackall, University of Canberra, Australia

Brian Glanz, Open Science Foundation,

M Fabiana Kubke, University of Auckland, New Zealand

Euan Adie, , UK

Greg Grossmeier, University of Michigan, CC, USA

Peter Murray-Rust, University of Cambridge, UK
This endorsement has been made in public at the Science Commons meeting in Redmond, US. where Cameron and I have advertised the PP one day after launch

Peter Binfield, Public Library of Science, USA

Todd Vision, National Evolutionary Synthesis Center, USA

Pam Ryan, University of Alberta Libraries, Canada

Lynne Pope, , New Zealand

John Bacon, ARRL, USA

Martin Fenner, Hannover Medical School, Germany

David García Aristegui, Biomol Informatics, Spain

Michael Chelen, Open Science Info, USA
Spreading knowledge is a primary method for advancing research. When legal barriers are removed, scientists are free to focus their efforts toward achieving this goal.

Eloy Rodrigues, Universidade do Minho, Portugal

Darcy Cowan, , New Zealand

Yishay Mor, London Knowledge Lab, UK

Rupak Chakravarty, Panjab University, INDIA
It will bring new revolution in Scientific Communication having ultimate implications on the society making it a better place to live in. Knowledge Created must be shared to enable collective progress and development. I strongly endorse the Panton Principles as a powerful harbinger of Open Society.

- Rupak Chakravarty

Sridhar Gutam, Indian Agricultural Research Institute, India

AkelaRecords, , spain
Somos una sello discográfico en pleno auge. Nuestros principios se basan en la distribución y difusión libre de las obras musicales. Hacemos frente a la actual industria musical. Estamos creando unas infraestructuras profesionales para satisfacer las necesidades de los grupos de música. No ofrecemos contrato discográfico simplemente somos una herramienta más para la autogestión musical. http://akelarecords.scoom.com/

Endre Sebestyén, ARI-HAS, Hungary

John Dupuis, York University Libraries, Canada

Julian Saunders, the Joined Up Company, UK
Scientific advances depend on a functioning global community of scientists with access to the work of peers

Anali Perry, Arizona State University Libraries, USA

Melanie Dulong de Rosnay, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands

David Bollier, On the Commons, USA

Lance McKee, OGC, USA
I am very glad that the Panton Principles have been published and a geospatial open access working group has been established. Open access is particularly important for sciences that create and use geospatially referenced data, and progress here will contribute to open access in non-science areas such as disaster management, municipal management and building information models.

Tim Hubbard, Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute, UK

Jonathan Eisen, University of California, Davis, USA

Sandra Bettina Ferrante, , Argentina

Federico Morando, NEXA Center for Internet & Society, Politecnico di Torino, Italy

Kousaku Okubo, DDBJ/DBCLS, Japan

Diego Mauricio Riaño-Pachón, Postdoctoral researcher, Germany

Àngel Pérez-Beroy, Institut Valerià Pujol i Bosch, Catalonia-Spain
Pharmacist

Prateek Singh, Baya Labs, India
Its a great step for the larger good of humanity!

Tom Moritz, independent, USA

Chris Leonard, PhysMath Central, UK

Louis Liebenberg, CyberTracker Conservation, South Africa

Melissa Hagemann, Open Society Institute, USA

Chris Taylor, The European Bioinformatics Institute, UK

Sara Rutter, University of Hawaii at Manoa, USA

Margaret Smith, Bobst Library, New York University, USA

Anthony Beck, University of Leeds, Computing, UK
I fully endorse the principles and would like to see them applied to all aspects of academic enquiry and not just science. Conceptual blocks and silo-ed data severely inhibit academic progress

Anna Betz, , UK

Thomas Wright Sulcer, Independent, United States
Knowledge is something that the more we give away, the richer we become.

Xavier Le Bras, University Rennes 1, France

Marius Kempe, University of Cambridge, UK

David Shotton, University of Oxford, UK
Full support!

Leo Lahti, , Finland

Pat Schloss, University of Michigan, USA

David F. Flanders, Joint Information Systems Commitee, UK

Scharffe, INRIA, France

Manoel Galdino, PHd candidate at University of São Paulo, Brazil

Alvin Hutchinson, Smithsonian Institution, USA

Kevin McDonagh, Novoda, England

Bryan Vickery, BioMed Central, UK

Sayeed Choudhury, Johns Hopkins University, USA

Heather Joseph, SPARC, USA

Tania Bubela, University of Alberta, Canada

Santiago Baos, OpenArchives, Spain

Brunella Longo, , UK

Eric Zimmerman, IDC Herzliya, Israel

Daniel Dietrich, Technical University Berlin, Germany, Germany


Comments are closed.