Data rescue

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data_rescue

Data rescue is a movement among scientists, researchers and others to preserve primarily government-hosted data sets, often scientific in nature, to ward off their removal from publicly available websites. While the concept of preserving federal data existed before, it gained new impetus with the election in 2016 of U.S. President Donald Trump. The concept of harvesting and preserving federal web pages began as early as 2008, at the conclusion of President George W. Bush's second term, under the name "End of Term Presidential Harvest." rdf:langString
rdf:langString Data rescue
xsd:integer 53383308
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rdf:langString May 2021
rdf:langString Lots of 'others', 'often', etc.
rdf:langString Data rescue is a movement among scientists, researchers and others to preserve primarily government-hosted data sets, often scientific in nature, to ward off their removal from publicly available websites. While the concept of preserving federal data existed before, it gained new impetus with the election in 2016 of U.S. President Donald Trump. The concept of harvesting and preserving federal web pages began as early as 2008, at the conclusion of President George W. Bush's second term, under the name "End of Term Presidential Harvest." Soon after Trump's election, scientists, librarians and others in the U.S. and Canada—fearing that the administration of Trump (who had expressed doubts about the validity of the scientific consensus on the existence of climate change) would act to remove scientific data from government websites—began working to preserve those data. Quickly, the concept of data rescue became a grassroots movement, with organized "hackathon" events at cities across the U.S. and elsewhere, often hosted at universities and other institutions of higher education.
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data from the linked data cloud