Dear colleague,

The way that science works is fundamentally changing and an equally important 
transformation is taking place in how companies and societies innovate. The 
advent of digital technologies is making science and innovation more open, 
collaborative and global. In this light Commissioner Carlos Moedas has set 
three goals for EU research and innovation policy: Open Innovation, Open 
Science and Open to the World. These three goals were first discussed by 
Commissioner Moedas in a speech in June 2015, showing how research and 
innovation contribute across the political priorities of the European 
Commission. These goals do not represent a new policy initiative or funding 
programme as such, but a way to reinforce existing programmes such as Horizon 
2020, and reinvigorate existing policies such as the European Research Area. 
The book Open Innovation, Open Science, Open to the World - a vision for Europe 
brings together some of the key conceptual insights behind the "Three Os" and 
highlights actions that are already taking place or are being prepared at time 
of publication in May 2016. It is hoped that the ideas and initiatives 
described in the book will stimulate anyone interested in European research and 
innovation, and encourage debate and lead to new ideas on what the European 
Union should do, should not do, or do differently.[1]

You can download the book from the EU Bookshop at 
http://bookshop.europa.eu/en/open-innovation-open-science-open-to-the-world-pbKI0416263/

Extract from the book on Open Science below

A Vision of the Future

The year is 2030. Open Science has become a reality and is offering a whole 
range of new, unlimited opportunities for research and discovery worldwide. 
Scientists, citizens, publishers, research institutions, public and private 
research funders, students and education professionals as well as companies 
from around the globe are sharing an open, virtual environment, called The Lab. 
Open source communities and scientists, publishing companies and the high-tech 
industry have pushed the EU and UNESCO to develop common open research 
standards, establishing a virtual learning gateway, offering free public access 
to all scientific data as well as to all publicly funded research. The OECD as 
well as many countries from Africa, Asia, and Latin America have adopted these 
new standards, allowing users to share a common platform to exchange knowledge 
at a global scale. High-tech start-ups and small public-private partnerships 
have spread across the globe to become the service providers of the new digital 
science learning network, empowering researchers, citizens, educators, 
innovators and students worldwide to share knowledge by using the best 
available technology. Free and open, high quality and crowd-sourced science, 
focusing on the grand societal challenges of our time, shapes the daily life of 
a new generation of researchers.

I would recommend you to read this book for getting a glimpse of future 
developments. There is also lot of synergies and will add momentum for our 
vision for Open Geospatial Science [2],[3],[4].

Best wishes,

Suchith

Dr. Suchith Anand
http://www.geoforall.org/

Geo for All - Building and expanding Open Geospatial Science


[1] http://ec.europa.eu/research/openvision/index.cfm
[2] http://opensourcegeospatial.icaci.org/2016/04/open-geospatial-science-2/
[3] http://www.mdpi.com/journal/ijgi/special_issues/science-applications
[4] http://opengeospatialdata.springeropen.com/about/editorial-board














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