The benefits of findable, accessible, interoperable and re-useable information
Data in journal publishing is currently big news. In 2016, an influential manifesto coined the term ‘Fair’ (findable, accessible, interoperable and re-usable, to which I would also add provenance) to describe the properties digital data should have to benefit the academic community, and therefore support discovery and innovation.1 The manifesto has already prompted many librarians reinvent themselves as research data managers. But Fair data is arguably better illustrated by working examples rather than aspirations – and by the benefits it has given to computational chemistry, crystallography and spectroscopy over the past two decades.