Dear Sachith,

It is quite possible to share experiments through the UltraScan
gateway, and we have carefully thought about this problem. Of course,
it is important to recognize data ownership and to protect it as much
as possible.

In our gateway people can identify selected users of their own gateway
instance with whom they want to share their data. On a first level,
this only permits access of the analysis results, visualizations and
metadata. Another flag (=user-level) controls if they should have access
to the primary data.  User levels are decided by the administrator of
the gateway instance. We chose to assign individual gateway instances
for each institution. Each also has their own MySQL DB backend, so data
can never get mixed up or misappropriated.

So we allow the user pretty much fine grained control over who can
access what portions of their data. This is one case where you really
want to micromanage access rights to safeguard people's research data
and possibly proprietary information for corporate clients.

I think this question is best handled by the specific implementation
of the gateway, and probably not necessarily something that should be
handled on the level of Airavata.

Regards, -Borries


On Wed, Mar 19, 2014 at 02:56:18PM -0400, Sachith Withana wrote:
> Hi all,
> 
> I'm exploring the use cases of allowing experiment sharing through
> Airavata.
> It would be wonderful if the science community can help me understand the
> real world use cases of Experiment sharing.
> 
> I initially thought of having groups in a community and allow sharing
> within group(s) or make it public ( within the gateway). But it could be
> different.
> 
> Is anyone using this now? and how do you do that?
> 
> -- 
> Thanks,
> Sachith Withana

Reply via email to