I took the liberty and contacted TIB about this. It seems there is no problem using their infrastructure for large amounts of biodiversity records. Here's the body of the reply:
"The requirements for data providers are more or less the ability to store and maintain the data and provide metadata to it. They do not need to be European institutions, but should work on a non- commercial basis. Ideally for millions ob objects more than one prefix is advisable, but technically one prefix can be used for an unlimited number of DOI names. In my opinion the use of DOI names would fit very well for biodiversity information, I am looking forward to discuss these issues with you further."
From what I have seen they assign a DOI to a whole dataset so far. But as it makes sense to cite a single specimen in biological articles, I dont think they would mind.
Markus
PS: Anyone heard of Names For Life before? Seems they (plan to) use DOIs for scientific (prokaryotic) names. http://names4life.com/
On Nov 25, 2008, at 12:50, Roger Hyam wrote:
My thought is that the German TIB does not expect 'publishers' to have millions of digital assets. There is an issue with the granularity of our data compared with that of the publishing industry that would call for a different business model for a central register.
What happens if the maintenance fee is not paid? Do the identifiers cease to be permanent? There are many things in life that are permanent if you keep paying the bills our problem is paying the bills.
<half-joke> As a community we could run a central register for GUIDs. I'm currently free next year and would set one up but some one else would have to find the money to pay for me (and my successors/ assistances) and the infrastructure .... indefinitely. The whole thing would have a significant set up cost and an on-going maintenance cost. It could be tuned to our needs and run at a much cheaper cost than DOIs but it would still cost real cash money. An endowment of say $10m (a secure income of $100k/year at current base rates) would secure the thing as a viable project provided we still got input from larger institutions on an ongoing basis. </half-joke>
All the best,
Roger
On 25 Nov 2008, at 10:59, Markus Döring (GBIF) wrote:
That is very interesting, Gregor. Apparently it is up to the registration agency on how much they charge (and not the central DOI). There are currently 8 agencies for different areas with the German TIB issuing DOI prefixes for "registration of scientific primary and secondary data" at the cost of 250€ per prefix (which allows you to create as many DOIs as you like).
http://www.doi.org/handbook_2000/registration_agencies.html#8.2 http://www.doi.org/registration_agencies.html
It would also be possible to setup a new registration agency for biodiversity data if we feel this is more suited to our needs. There are several costs associated with this though, an annual membership fee ($35.000), a "franchise fee" for each newly registered name ($0.04/doi) and a maintenance fee ($0.005/doi). So this is clearly much more expensive and would be around 9 million dollars each year for 200 million occurrence records in GBIF. http://www.doi.org/handbook_2000/registration_agencies.html#8.8
So I guess this is what was investigated before and which is far too expensive. But it should be worth consulting the TIB registry, 250€ per publisher doesnt sound bad at all.
Markus
PS: I am expressing my personal thoughts in this conversation and not GBIFs official policy.
On Nov 25, 2008, at 6:26, Gregor Hagedorn wrote:
I previously concurred with arguments against DOI on the basis of cost. However, is this correct?
http://www.tib-hannover.de/en/the-tib/doi-registration-agency/ states a yearly fee of 250 EUR for the publisher, not a per-object fee. That is considerably less than the Total Cost of Ownership of running custom-designed LSID software. DOI is well established and many people already know that it can be looked up on the web ...
Gregor
Gregor Hagedorn Heinrich-Seidel-Str. 2 12167 Berlin skype: g.hagedorn
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