Saturday, August 9, 2025

Experts Sound Alarm on Foreign Control of Data about American Researchers, Call for Action

Voting is Open for SXSW 2026 - Including the Data Foundation's Great Data Heist Proposal

SXSW 2026 Proposal Available for Public Support

WASHINGTON, DC, UNITED STATES, August 8, 2025 /EINPresswire.com/ -- Data Foundation President Nick Hart, former Federal Chief Information Officer Suzette Kent, NYU Professor Julia Lane, and former U.S. Chief Statistician Nancy Potok published a new commentary in NextGov warning about national security vulnerabilities for how data about America's researchers is managed and controlled by foreign entities.

In "Knowledge Nation and Security at Risk," published in July 2025, the experts detail how

foreign publishers are systematically acquiring tools and data about American researchers, creating unprecedented security risks for U.S. intellectual property and scientific competitiveness.

The commentary describes:
--Over 400 American academic institutions and 700,000 researchers have their confidential data managed by foreign-owned systems following acquisitions like Dutch-based Elsevier's purchase of Interfolio
--Foreign publishers can now "move information off American soil, use it to build a full picture of current and future American science, and repackage and resell it regardless of the potential threat to national security"
-- Current privacy policies allow data to be processed and stored in countries including China, with no controls over reuse and resale of sensitive research information

"There is now a real and present danger of the sale of sensitive information to third parties and use of that data without the knowledge or consent of the U.S. government," the authors write. "The resulting vast data repository reflects the often unpublished intellectual property and scientific collaborations of tens of thousands of American researchers."

The authors highlight concerning examples, noting that Elsevier's updated privacy policy makes clear "the data on research and researchers can be reused and resold by their Anglo-Dutch owners, RELX and their related companies... [as well as] sponsors, joint venture partners and other third parties." The information may be "stored and processed in your region or another country where Elsevier companies and their service providers maintain servers and facilities, including Australia, China, France, Germany, India, Ireland, the Netherlands, the Philippines, Singapore, the United Kingdom and the United States."

The experts propose a comprehensive three-step national strategy:
--Balance contract negotiations by requiring universities to negotiate as domestic consortiums with mandatory transparency requirements
--Secure data about researchers through domestic hosting with federal certification and strict access controls
--Require openness and transparency including public disclosure of foreign publishers' methodologies and analysis tools

"If the for-profit foreign data broker industry continues to go unmonitored and unchecked, the United States risks weakening the security of critical research," the authors warn. "Immediate action by policymakers and research leaders is urgently needed."

SXSW Panel Proposal Seeks Community Support

The Data Foundation submitted a panel proposal titled "Great Data Heist: America's Research Under Foreign Control" for the 2026 South by Southwest Conference. The proposal is now live for community voting through August 24, 2025.

The proposed panel would feature Hart, Kent, Potok, and Christopher Marcum exploring solutions to protect America's research infrastructure while maintaining the openness essential to scientific progress.

"This represents one of the most significant but underreported threats to American scientific leadership," said Hart. "We need immediate policy action and public awareness to prevent further erosion of control over our nation's intellectual assets."

Community members can vote for the panel proposal at: https://participate.sxsw.com/flow/sxsw/sxsw26/community-voting-sxsw/page/community-voting/session/1753655865720001lNpw

Voting closes Sunday, August 24, 2025 at 11:59 PM PT. SXSW will announce accepted programming in early November.
Read the full Nextgov commentary: https://www.nextgov.com/ideas/2025/07/knowledge-nation-and-security-risk/406958/

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