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Before this module, I was familiar with the general idea that research data should be well organized and, when possible, shared with others. However, the FAIR principles helped me think about this in a more structured way. Making data findable, accessible, interoperable, and reusable is not only about uploading files somewhere, but also about providing enough context, metadata, and documentation so that other researchers can actually understand and use the data.
In my own research, I think one of the biggest challenges is that data are often generated over a long period of time and may come from different experiments, instruments, or analysis steps. If the file names, folder structures, and metadata are not clear from the beginning, it can become difficult even for myself to find and interpret older data later. This module reminded me that good data management should start during the project, not only at the end when preparing a publication or thesis.
I also think that open data is important, but it needs to be handled carefully. Some data may contain sensitive information, unpublished results, or data generated together with collaborators. Therefore, openness should be balanced with ethical, legal, and practical considerations. For my own work, I would like to improve the way I document metadata, analysis workflows, and data availability, so that my results can be more transparent and easier to verify.
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