 Fel ychydig i ddim yn ddim yn cael ei wneud am oed yn fwy o'r gyflawn. Mae'r môl yn ymwneud. Felly, ymolodol yn ymwneud i'r hollol o'r hollol. Rwy'n cael ei ddweud o'r hollol, mae'n cael ei gweithio, yn ddechrau. Mae'n hyn, yn y buddig yma. Y ddweud yma yn y ddweud, yn y llwyddig yma, yn y 5th yma. Mae'n rhaid i'n ddim yn ffordd. Yn y ddweud, mae'n ddweud o'r hollol o'r hollol o'r hollol. If you could get speedily out of this building, into the other building, up to the sixth floor, have your lunch and come down again, but maybe you have a chance to enjoy the nice fresh air of Bill Nes this morning. This event has actually been live streamed today, and there is a link going round via Twitter. Thank you. So welcome everybody who is watching from afar. We can do it and if it's valuable. In the open air plus project, I do have four workshops. This is our last and perhaps the very interesting workshop The point to all these workshops is to get a better understanding of Open Access, Open Science, Research data of managementps Interoperability, infrastructure, all kinds of topics ac mae'n iawn i ddiwrnod cyfrifwlltio'n gweithio'r ymlaen. A fyddwn i'w ddim yn ymgyrch gyda'u ddaw iawn i'r sydd y brosiect i'r oedd ymgyrch gyda'u ddaw iawn i gyrdd ar y blynedd ar y ddod. Felly, ymweld i chi'n gweithio ar hyn yn rydyn ni'n gweithio'r ymgyrch gyda'u ddaw iawn i'r ddaw iawn i gyrdd. Ymgyrch gyda'u ddaw iawn i'r gweithio ar y ddaw iawn, Mae'r ff crabasio yn cymryd iawn o'r cyflandrofa, oedd i'n ystod gyda'r cymryd iawn i'n gweithioillr thymau a'u cyflandrofa, ac dyna'n meddyl i'r llunion cymryd cyfan, mae'n mynd i'n ffordd gyda'r EC, i gael'r fanchun ffantaf o cael eu faintcoff, gweithio'r fanchun o'r llunion cyfrywethe, a'r ffundin sylfor â'r gwaith yn ei pwg ar y ffordd. Gorllwedd yn cyfanyddio i'r cyfwyr y drefyn cartiau ymgylchedd codi'r cyll Mrs. We are a very large project. We have many different parlance and we are spread all over Europe. We have a every European country represented in the project. We are also moving gradually to represent funding information for other European funders and funding details at national level. We rely heavily on repositories and data sources that come into us that we harvest, so we have access to repositories. The key thing about over there is that we are linking from publications to project information. In a way this is very important because this can give the European Commission an idea of impact in various funding streams within various disciplines so they can know how many publications come out of various projects and in open access. That is a very important instrument for the European Commission. What we want to do is to apply that model to other national funding streams. We are also linking to research data underlying a publication. That has been an area of focus and activity in Open Air Plus. This is an idea that the research question can be wider than just the publication. It can also be about the underlying data and the project information. We want to give a wider context to the research environment. We are linking to data and this is really where the context of the first study, the legal and licensing issue comes into. When we link to data we know very little about the copyright in the Data Based Protection Act that we are linking to. This is what you are going to hear from the legal team today. What is in it for us as an infrastructure? What difficulties might we encounter in having data centres as data repositories as our data providers? Are we infringing any legal aspects? This is really what the study set out to look into. It looked into six different countries. We examined the Data Based Protection Act in six different countries. We did a very thorough investigation of activities in those countries. Also it had an application that was done in case studies, which will also be presented today, which I think might be applicable for you in the audience. We look forward to hearing about that. The afternoon we are going to look at sustainability. We have here members of the sustainability team in the audience who are looking at how to sustain these infrastructures. We are a project. We like to move into a permanent infrastructure environment, but we need to understand things like who are our stakeholders, what are the services we are going to provide. All these things have to be investigated. We carried out a study in open air within the project to set the ground to the framework for that. We are taking it further to investigate it more deeply. You will hear from the team in the afternoon. I think the point of this whole day is that we would like to have an interactive session. We would like to have your input on this and your questions and your comments. I think the teams would appreciate that very much at this stage of their studies. Please participate. I would like to announce that we have our annual open air conference next year in Athens. In May we have set the date for that. This will be at the Acropolis Museum, which is a fantastic location. Now this slide shows what has gone on. Back to Athens, please put that in your diary. It will be an exciting two-day event in a very good location. That will explore the future of open access. Natalie has just walked in from Athens. We would like to see you all from that. Last but not least, I would like to thank our colleagues, both here at the University and at Caunas University. I don't know how many kilometres away from here, but Gin Tari especially and her team have done a lot of work preparing this event and organising the location for us. Thank you very much to them. Thank you very much for all of you coming here. I would like to start now the session. I'm going to introduce Professor Veeber, who was very lucky to have with us. He was very much involved in authoring this study. He is the Chair of Intellectual Property Law at the University of Goettingen, Chair of Intellectual Property Law Media and ICT Law, and his specialism is in electronic contracting. He spent a time in Vienna at the University of Economics and he also had his professorship at Stanford Law School, and he just told me that it was too sunny there, so he returned to Germany, back to Goettingen. Professor Veeber, I'd like to introduce you. He's also going to give us the whole picture of the study, introduce the study and focus on the forms of protection in the study. Watch what sort of database copyright and maybe explain to us what this is so generous. Thank you very much for us. Over to you.