What happens if the original one is updated?

The curation Dataset has a link to the original Id of the dataset. Do we keep track in the original dataset to the live object? 

 

Curation Area is specific for each space. 

Anyone else in the space/group. Everybody can see it. 

 

There is a staging area per space. There is a staging area that is private? 

  1. Identify what repositories are compatible with what I want to do.
  2. Help me refine what the repository needs for me to do a submission. If the repository requires an abstract. We need to provide a way to add the abstract to the dataset. Or other kind of metadata/requirements for the datasets/collection in order to be published. 

a) identify the datasets you want to publish. And create the curation object.

b) Call the matchmaker. I am interested in this thing. What repositories are compatible with this?

c) Clowder should save the preferences for the repositories someone wants to publish.

d) It is unclear what the matchmaker accepts as input. 

e) Publication Object is the Curation Object + DOI (Digital Object Identifier). The returned object from the repository. 

TO BUILD: 

Sprint 1 - Curation Projects. 

Optional: 

 

Sprint 2 - Matchmaker Calls 

 

Sprint 3 - C3PR Calls. 

 

Sprint tasks:

  1. Staging area per space [Indira]
    1. standalone plugin
  2. Create curation object [Yan]
    1. Select  dataset and collections from space [Luigi]
  3. Submit for publication (separate plugins?) [Rob]
  1. Call matchmaker and pick repository (separate plugins?)
  2. Refine metadata
  3. Store user preferences for publication in profile
  4. Store published object (everyone in space can see them)
  1. Edit curation object
  2. List curation objects and published objects that a dataset/collection are part of
Steps
  1. Create curation object
  2. Matchmaker query and selection
  3. Editing of metadata and submission to repository
Questions
  1. Who can see the curation objects?
Background
  1. curation object -> publication object
  2. repositories preferences
    1. a repository says what options it provides
    2. user might have preferences set in their profiles in the spaces
      1. generally speaking I want things free
      2. but in one instance I might be willing to pay
  3. attributes of the content vs attributes of the repositories
    1. "I would like"
    2. "I have images"
  4. "if my dataset doesn't have license, assign creative common"
  5. preference / requirements