Web search has become an essential technology and commodity, driving not only future innovations but forming a backbone for our digital economy. Regrettably, currently few non-European gatekeepers control Web search, which creates a biased, one-sided information access centred around economic success rather than the needs of citizens or European values and jurisdiction. This one-sided ecosystem puts pressure on many small Web contributors from science, economy, art, culture, media and society requiring them to optimize their content for a few gatekeepers. A system greatly benefiting the gatekeepers thereby creates a vicious cycle, which leads to locked-in effects and a closed search engine market.
To promote an open human-centred search engine market and provide a true choice to users when selecting search engines based on their own preferences, OpenWebSearch.EU proposes to develop and pilot the core of a European Open Web Index (OWI) and the foundation for an open and extensible European open Web Search and Analysis Infrastructure (OWSAI).
Granitzer, Michael; Voigt, Stefan; Fathima, Noor; Golasowski, Martin; Guetl, Christian; Hecking, Tobias; Hendriksen, Gijs; Hiemstra, Djoerd; Martinovič, Jan; Mitrović, Jelena; Mlakar, Izidor; Moiras, Stavros; Nussbaumer, Alexander; Öster, Per; Potthast, Martin; Srdič, Marjana; Sharikadze, Megi; Slaninová, Kateřina; Stein, Benno; De Vries, Arjen; Vondrák, Vít; Wagner, Andreas; Zerhoudi, Saber (2023)
Granitzer, Michael; Voigt, Stefan; Fathima, Noor; Golasowski, Martin; Guetl, Christian...
Journal of the Association for Information Science and Technology, asi.24818.
Abstract
Web search is a crucial technology for the digital economy. Dominated by a few gatekeepers focused on commercial success, however, web publishers have to optimize their content for these gatekeepers, resulting in a closed ecosystem of search engines as well as the risk of publishers sacrificing quality. To encourage an open search ecosystem and offer users genuine choice among alternative search engines, we propose the development of an Open Web Index (OWI). We outline six core principles for developing and maintaining an open index, based on open data principles, legal compliance, and collaborative technology development. The combination of an open index with what we call declarative search engines will facilitate the development of vertical search engines and innovative web data products (including, e.g., large language models), enabling a fair and open information space. This framework underpins the EU‐funded project OpenWebSearch.EU, marking the first step towards realizing an Open Web Index.Impact and development of an Open Web Index for open web search
DOI: 10.1002/asi.24818
Open Access
Peer Reviewed
Dittrich, Jirathana; Hölbling, Daniel; Tiede, Dirk; Sæmundsson, Þorsteinn (2022)
Remote Sensing 14 (13), 3166.
Two-dimensional deformation estimates derived from Persistent Scatterer Interferometric (PSI) analysis of Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) data can improve the characterisation of spatially and temporally varying deformation processes of Earth’s surface. In this study, we examine the applicability of Persistent Scatterer (PS) Line-Of-Sight (LOS) estimates in providing two-dimensional deformation information, focusing on the retrieval of the local surface-movement processes. Two Sentinel-1 image stacks, ascending and descending, acquired from 2015 to 2018, were analysed based on a single master interferometric approach. First, Interferometric SAR (InSAR) deformation signals were corrected for divergent plate spreading and the Glacial Isostatic Adjustment (GIA) signals. To constrain errors due to rasterisation and interpolation of the pointwise deformation estimates, we applied a vector-based decomposition approach to solve the system of linear equations, resulting in 2D vertical and horizontal surface-deformation velocities at the PSs. We propose, herein, a two-step decomposition procedure that incorporates the Projected Local Incidence Angle (PLIA) to solve for the potential slope-deformation velocity. Our derived 2D velocities reveal spatially detailed movement patterns of the active Svínafellsjökull slope, which agree well with the independent GPS time-series measurements available for this area.Inferring 2D Local Surface-Deformation Velocities Based on PSI Analysis of Sentinel-1 Data: A Case Study of Öræfajökull, Iceland
DOI: 10.3390/rs14133166
Open Access
Peer Reviewed
Admin-Lokal, Hans (2023)
Video.
demo Einführung Video - KDSF
Open Access