BioTorrents — easier, faster exchange of science-related open-access software and datasets

The goal of BioTor­rents is to allow eas­ier and faster exchange of science-related open-access soft­ware and datasets.
BioTor­rents allows sci­en­tists to rapidly share their results, datasets, and soft­ware using the pop­u­lar Bit­Tor­rent file shar­ing tech­nol­ogy.   (The BioTor­rents website)

From Alain Borel (Bib­lio­theque Sci­en­tifique, Lau­sanne) on the CHMINF List­serv, 1/18/10,  in response to the intro­duc­tion of the sub­ject by Egon Wil­ligha­gen at Upp­sala Univ.:

 
“The dis­trib­uted nature of Bit­Tor­rents sounds nice (it doesn’t mat­ter that zil­lions of users start down­load­ing stuff, since they rapidly all become data sources them­selves). How­ever, I won­der how the updates will be treated? OAI-PMH feels like a much bet­ter pro­to­col from this point of view. Maybe OAI-PMH could be used as a wrap­per for pub­lish­ing and har­vest­ing Bit­Tor­rent seeds (one seed par arti­cle)?” (A.B.)
 
From the web­site:
“The Open Archives Ini­tia­tive Pro­to­col for Meta­data Har­vest­ing (OAI-PMH) is a low-barrier mech­a­nism for repos­i­tory inter­op­er­abil­ity. Data Providers are repos­i­to­ries that expose struc­tured meta­data via OAI-PMH. Ser­vice Providers then make OAI-PMH ser­vice requests to har­vest that meta­data. OAI-PMH is a set of six verbs or ser­vices that are invoked within HTTP.”
…offer­ing Inter­op­er­abil­ity through Meta­data Exchange