
The seventh episode deals with an entire area of modern society: science. We explore the significance of sharing digital data for scientific work and discuss the opportunities and challenges currently being debated in this field. Data sharing is a fundamental prerequisite for science, because in order to verify the validity of theories, models, and measurements, the relevant data must be made available to the scientific community. The digital transformation has given rise to various technologies that enable new forms of data generation, processing, and linking, and scientific methods themselves have also evolved. The concept of open science has become prominent in this context. It embodies something of a dream for humanity: the idea of open, freely circulating knowledge that all people can use to improve their livelihoods or satisfy their thirst for knowledge. In order for science to help shape social development and accompany economic change in an innovative way in a digitalized world, openness is needed, but so are sensible regulations and reliable infrastructures.
Guests
Prof. Torsten Schrade is Academy Professor for Digital Humanities at Mainz University of Applied Sciences and heads the “Digital Academy” research department at the Academy of Sciences and Literature in Mainz.
Prof. Dr. Thomas Stäcker is Director of the University and State Library in Darmstadt.
More information
Rat für Informationsinfrastrukturen (2022): Datenpolitik, Open Science und Dateninfrastrukturen: Aktuelle Entwicklungen im europäischen Raum, Göttingen. https://rfii.de/?p=7743 [07.10.2025].
Rat für Informationsinfrastrukturen (2025): Leistung in Verantwortung. Zur Zukunft der wissenschaftlichen
Informationsinfrastrukturen in Deutschland, Göttingen. https://rfii.de/?p=12040 [07.10.2025].




