Globally Accessible Distributed Data Sharing (GADDS): A decentralized FAIR platform to facilitate data sharing in the life sciences

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Abstract

Motivation: Technical advances have revolutionized the life sciences and researchers commonly face challenges associated with handling large amounts of heterogeneous digital data. The Findable, Accessible, Interoperable and Reusable (FAIR) principles provide a framework to support effective data management. However, implementing this framework is beyond the means of most researchers in terms of resources and expertise, requiring awareness of metadata, policies, community agreements and other factors such as vocabularies and ontologies. Results: We have developed the Globally Accessible Distributed Data Sharing (GADDS) platform to facilitate FAIR-like data-sharing in cross-disciplinary research collaborations. The platform consists of (i) a blockchain-based metadata quality control system, (ii) a private cloud-like storage system and (iii) a version control system. GADDS is built with containerized technologies, providing minimal hardware standards and easing scalability, and offers decentralized trust via transparency of metadata, facilitating data exchange and collaboration. As a use case, we provide an example implementation in engineered living material technology within the Hybrid Technology Hub at the University of Oslo.

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APA

Vazquez, P., Hirayama-Shoji, K., Novik, S., Krauss, S., & Rayner, S. (2022). Globally Accessible Distributed Data Sharing (GADDS): A decentralized FAIR platform to facilitate data sharing in the life sciences. Bioinformatics, 38(15), 3812–3817. https://doi.org/10.1093/bioinformatics/btac362

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