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Reference: Kozlowski LP. fCite: a fractional citation tool to quantify an individual's scientific research output. bioRxiv 771485; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/771485 __________________________________________________ General Data Protection Regulation vs. fCite data __________________________________________________ fCite uses some sensitive data such as names, surnames and process them for the purpose of calculating scores associated to those personal data, but this is totally legal and valid as: a) All data comes from public domain: - icite data (public domain data, more information https://www.nih.gov/web-policies-notices) - ORCID data (Creative Commons CC0 1.0 Universal public domain dedication). See for example: https://figshare.com/articles/ORCID_Public_Data_File_2016/4134027/1 This means that, to the extent possible under law, NIH and ORCID has waived all copyright and related or neighboring rights to the Public Data File, see for example: https://figshare.com/articles/ORCID_Public_Data_File_2016/4134027/1) Here, it is worth to stress that many people think that everything which can be scrapped from the internet is "public domain" (e.g. email or name taken from LinkedIn profile). This is not true, such a data are not "public domain" and this is where GDPR step in. In contrast, fCite collects and process the true public data (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Public_domain) which means that no exclusive intellectual property rights apply for them. Those rights have been forfeited and expressly waived to NIH and ORCID organizations and released to public (aka you as the author agreed to give all rights to the publisher which decided to put them in PUBMED and/or ORCID, in this way you agreed to be seen in PUBMED and any other resources using it). b) We do not collect any personally identifiable information (PII) about you during your visit at fCite. We do, however, collect some data about your visit to our Web site to help us better understand how the public uses the site and how to make it more helpful (the traffic data e.g. country of the visitor). We collect information from visitors who read, browse, and/or download information from our Web site. c) We do not use the telephone or the email information of fCite users. You will never obtain email or phone from fCite just because you visited our site. d) The main purpose of collecting and processing of the data in fCite is a common good of the humankind. We anticipate that fairer allocation of limited funds devoted for science has a great potential to accelerate human progress. The scientist who really contributed to the science progress e.g. she/he has high FLAE(RCR) score should be funded easier in the future, instead the one which just co-author many, irrelevant items without impact. In this way, we also promote the quality not the quantity. Thus, from now on "publish or perish" can be replaced by "publish quality or perish" model. In this way you can also easily spot the important publications e.g. a single author paper of FLAE of 10 or more (the threshold here is not so important) is a sign of some important discovery, work which is worth more than for instance 500 average papers. e) Note that fCite is accessible free of charges f) (Un)fortunetelly, as fCite does not contain email or phone information it is virtually not possible to notify all authors about inclusion of their names in fCite. Even in the case of corresponding authors, we do not have email addresses (iCite do not provide them in json files) and therefore we cannot contact the authors. Moreover, even if we would scrapped emails from PUBMED (which we do not do as we are not spammers) most of the emails would be obsolete. Additionally, we do not think that sending few millions of emails is a way to go. ====================================== Obviously, the above statement had been prepared for normal people. If you a lawyer and you have deep desire to talk with other lawyer, the detailed and compatible with General Data Protection Regulation version of the usage terms can be found here.