“Here be dragons”: Open Access to Research Data in the Humanities – Digital Humanities Methods and Tools
peter.suber's bookmarks 2019-05-10
Summary:
It has been estimated by Stefan Winkler Nees (from the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft-DFG) in 2011 that 90% of all digital research data is lost.We don’t know how many of this data belonged to the Humanities and hopefully, these numbers are better today, but we can assume that still a lot of Humanities data (and other data) is lost, because of missing infrastructures, or because no one has taken care of the long-term availability of this data in time.