Frequently Asked Questions
Welcome to the FAQ section of the SSH Open Marketplace. Here you can find the most asked questions and their answers. This page will be updated regularly to address the most frequently asked questions.
About the SSH Open Marketplace as a discovery portal
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What is the SSH Open Marketplace?
The SSH Open Marketplace is a discovery portal and aggregator for Social Sciences and Humanities (SSH) related resources. It catalogues and presents useful tools and services for SSH researchers and links them with other resources to facilitate their uptake. It may serve as an entry point in the European Open Science Cloud (EOSC) for researchers, scholars, and students from the SSH. See the description of the service in the “What is the SSH Open Marketplace” page.
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What is the difference between the SSH Open Marketplace and the EOSC Marketplace? Where should I put my service?
The SSH Open Marketplace is geared towards the social sciences and humanities, whereas EOSC is for all sciences. As such, the requirements are more strict to enter the EOSC Marketplace. In general, EOSC Marketplace entries are mature, high TRL (Technological Readiness Level) services and are onboarded by the institutional entity responsible for their development and maintenance. Entries on the SSH Open Marketplace are, above all, more focused on social sciences and humanities, which permits us to be more flexible in accepting tools and services still in development. As well, the contextualisation of the SSH Open Marketplace is another difference. Finally, know that all SSH related tools in the EOSC Marketplace are automatically ingested in the SSH Open Marketplace, so there is no need to worry about double posting. See “SSHOC and the EOSC” page for more information.
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What is the relationship between the SSH Open Marketplace and its entries?
The SSH Open Marketplace serves as an aggregator for third party resources. It offers detailed information on SSH relevant resources and access to them. The SSH Open Marketplace does not provide these resources, it guides its users to them. See the description of the service in the “What is the SSH Open Marketplace” page.
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Is the SSH Open Marketplace multilingual?
For the sake of simplicity the SSH Open Marketplace comes only with an English user interface. Furthermore, the majority of the records are in English. The Editorial Board encourages the addition of records about resources in other European languages, but search functionalities do not support multilingualism. For a better search experience, we recommend the following when creating a record about a non-English resource:
- The name of the entry (label) should be in English. If the English name of the resource does not exist or if it does not make sense to translate it, we recommend you include a description of the resource (in English) in the title (e.g. Portal xx, Corpus xx). Do not translate project’s name or alike that are only making sense in their original language or context.
- The description should be in English. Another language than English can also be used in this description field but If you want your resource to be discovered by users with all language backgrounds, you should add at least a short English description.
- Specify the language(s) of your resource in the dedicated ‘language’ metadata field.
- Use English keywords.
Some examples of records describing non English resources: The Academic Encyclopedia of Czech History; Portal Znameniti.hr
Using and contributing to the SSH Open Marketplace
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How can I use the SSH Open Marketplace?
It is very easy to use the SSH Open Marketplace. You use the search function or browse the facets to find resources of interest. Once you access the individual detail page of an entry you find all available information on the specific resource, relations to other resources or alternative resources. See our “How to use it?” page for more details.
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How can I contribute to the SSH Open Marketplace?
The SSH Open Marketplace is a collaborative service, to which any user can contribute, creating new entries in the catalogue or enriching existing ones. You can also let us know what you would like to add or report a bug using the Report an issue function which is available on each page. See also the “Create an individual item” tutorial on this page.
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As a researcher in Social Sciences and Humanities, why should I contribute to the SSH Open Marketplace?
Because this is an opportunity to promote your own work - by adding the tools or training materials you’ve created as items in the Marketplace - or to support the uptake of the tools you use in your work on a daily basis - by creating or enriching the records of the resources you are familiar with.
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How can I log in?
You may log into the SSH Open Marketplace because you want to suggest changes or corrections for a certain record. Or you may want to create an entirely new record. All of this is being done in the Edit Form of the SSH Open Marketplace. You can reach the Edit Form via the Log in function in the top right corner of the SSH Open Marketplace. You may use already available credentials like a Google or DARIAH account or your institutional ID. The SSH Open Marketplace is part of the EOSC AAI, which allows for a very convenient user authentication. See also the “Create an individual item” tutorial on this page.
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I am encountering an error when trying to log in. What can I do? Unfortunately some identity providers do not make the user’s e-mail available when logging in to the SSH Open Marketplace. In this case you will get the error “your identity provider needs to release all of the following user attributes: mail”.
If you cannot convince your university to release this information, another workaround is to use a different identity to log in. You can use your ORCID, but only if you have confirmed your e-mail address and set it to either “trusted parties” or “everyone”.If you have no other option, you could apply for a CLARIN account.
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I represent a certain community or infrastructure initiative. Is the SSH Open Marketplace open for us?
Yes, it is! The SSH Open Marketplace currently aggregates its content from a range of trusted sources like Programming Historian, the CLARIN Resource Families or DARIAH-Campus to name only three. Additionally, the SSH Open Marketplace cooperates with communities and infrastructure initiatives such as DARIAH-EU, CESSDA or CLARIN. If you think, the resources, methods and services of your community or initiative would fit into the SSH Open Marketplace, reach out to the Editorial Board. We are happy to discuss the options for individual cooperation with you.
About the SSH Open Marketplace (meta)data
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Can I upload data to the SSH Open Marketplace?
As a simple answer: no. The SSH Open Marketplace is a discovery portal for tools & services, training materials, datasets, publications and workflows, not a research data repository. To find suitable research data repositories for your research data we advise that you consult established services like re3data.
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Under which item type should I register my database? Databases or corpora with a frontend should generally be considered as services, they provide an infrastructure and service supporting the diffusion of datasets. However, a mere copy (or “dump”) of a database should be considered a dataset. If you are unsure, feel free to contact the Editorial Board.
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Why are there “empty entries” in the SSH Open Marketplace which contain no further or useful information? Regarding publications, currently most of them lack metadata. This is a temporary situation. Curation efforts are being made to improve the metadata quality, and publications without relations to other Marketplace items will soon be deleted.
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Why do you promote commercial software?
The SSH Open Marketplace promotes any tools and services used by the SSH research communities. Our goal is to encourage the uptake of open methods, but we choose to also showcase the reality of existing research practices and this includes commercial software. We are not affiliated to or receiving any revenues from the commercial software referenced in this website.
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What is the preferred granularity for resources showcased (i.e. if a training material is part of a five-chapter lesson, which entry/pointer should be used to record this resource on the SSH Open Marketplace)? There are no strict rules, so it is up to you to decide what you think would be the most relevant for a newcomer to your resource. It also depends on how much time you can spend on creating the entry/entries in the SSH Open Marketplace. As you can see in the “create an individual entry” tutorial, each record should come with as much detail as is useful for the user.
The SSH Open Marketplace is maintained and will be further developed by three European Research Infrastructures - DARIAH, CLARIN and CESSDA - and their national partners. It was developed as part of the "Social Sciences and Humanities Open Cloud" SSHOC project, European Union's Horizon 2020 project call H2020-INFRAEOSC-04-2018, grant agreement #823782.