Hauser, Thomas, author2016-06-212016-06-212016-06-03http://hdl.handle.net/10217/173066http://dx.doi.org/10.25675/10217/173066Presented at the National data integrity conference: data sharing: the how, why, when and when not to share held on June 2-3, 2016 at University of Colorado, Denver, Colorado. The National Data Integrity Conference is a gathering of people sharing new challenges and solutions regarding research data and integrity. This conference aims to provide attendees with both an understanding of data integrity issues and impart practical tools and skills to deal with them. Topics addressed will include data privacy, openness, policy, education and the impacts of sharing data, how to do it, when to do it, and when not to. Speakers and audience members come from diverse fields such as: Academic Research; Information Technology; Quality Assurance; Regulatory Compliance; Private Industry; Grant Funding; Government.Before coming to CU Boulder, Dr. Hauser was the Director of the Center for High Performance Computing at Utah State University, and Associate Director for Research Computing at Northwestern University. Dr. Hauser was also the founding director of the Center for High Performance Computing at Utah State University.Research Computing at CU Boulder provides services for researchers that include large-scale computing resources, storage of research data, high-speed data transfer capabilities, and support for data sharing.PowerPoint presentation given on June 3, 2016.born digitalPresentation slidesengconduct of sciencecyberinfrastructurefrictionless networkingresearch data governancedata educationOpportunities and challenges of data sharing in an academic research computing environmentTextThis presentation is open access and distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0).