Status document

Data status

Data Processing status

Status
Description
Implications

Public

Data are fully available

Private

Data are not available publicly through any means

A release date is recorded for the data, which are subsequently and automatically released as Public on reaching this date or being cited online or in a publication prior to this date

Controlled

Human-derived materials data deposited in KHBDB

Withdrawn

(1) The submitter has requested a Private status or an extension to an existing release date, but the INSDC, or a submissions brokering collaborator, has failed to apply the appropriate release date correctly. (2) Data are found to have been submitted to the databases without the permission of the rightful owner; this is expected to be extremely rare and requires formal institutional contact with the aggrieved institution. (3) Human sequence data that was restricted-access. (4) Serious events such as malfeasance or outright fraud

Data are not directly available publicly from INSDC partners through any means. However, because the data will have been distributed previously as Public, the INSDC partners cannot exercise any control on the resultant use of the data by third parties.

Permanently suppressed

Data are found to be incorrect with no immediate opportunity on the part of the owner to be updated.

Data are removed where possible from direct search tools but remain available by accession number. Permanently Suppressed data is not expected to be re-released.

Temporarily suppressed

Data owners realize after sequences have been released that they failed to request a confidential status, either at the time of submission, or within the period between completion of submission processing and the date on which the submission is normally made available to the public (this time period can vary among the INSDC members).

Data are removed where possible from direct search tools but remain available by accession number. Data will be re-released when published or after a certain date.

Replaced

Data owners generate new data under new accession identifiers that directly replace existing data. If possible, updates should be made to the existing accession instead of creating a new record with a new accession.

Data are removed where possible from direct search tools but remain available by accession number. Where possible, look-up by original accession identifiers leads to a re-direct to new records available under the new accession identifiers. In some cases, the original accession is added to the new record as a secondary accession.

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