@nicolaromano The "not giving due recognition" is expanded here in the act of "everyone benefits from OS equally". She proposes a self-scrutinising connection-centric alternative, where the emphasis is on forging meaningful, conscious connections between people practicing science for some common goal.
She argues that simply "make everything open" is not enough, and potentially, paradoxically, can exacerbate existing inequalities e.g. to poorer countries due to the existing imbalance itself
@MrHedmad Ok, it makes much more sense now, thanks for taking the time to explain!
@nicolaromano The fact that I didn't explain myself well + 500 chars max doesn't help.
In essence (and iiuc) she argues that a lot of OS is backed by the feeling that science is done trough assembly of data "bricks", thus commodifying it. This may give unfair advantage to some OS stakeholders (companies) vs others (e.g. farmers) for to a variety of reasons, like access to means of using the open data. She gives examples of how the EU backs OS specifically for the monetary connotations of OS