Cover Pages: Dublin Core Metadata Initiative (DCMI)

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Dublin Core Metadata Initiative (DCMI)

[June 30, 2000] "The Dublin Core Metadata Initiative is a cross-disciplinary international effort to develop mechanisms for the discovery-oriented description of diverse resources in an electronic environment. The Dublin Core Element Set comprises fifteen elements which together capture a representation of essential aspects related to the description of resources. The majority of work on the Dublin Core has addressed the definition of semantics rather than syntax or structure, allowing rapid conceptual development free of the constraints imposed by specific implementation environments. Whilst beneficial in many ways, this has led to a certain lack of clarity at times, especially in relation to development of 'qualification' mechanisms which enrich descriptions in the Dublin Core. It has also made interoperable implementation difficult, as individual implementors have typically developed their own internal mechanisms for actually encoding Dublin Core; mechanisms which are not always compatible with those of their potential collaborators elsewhere. . . The Dublin Core Data Model working group was set up to look at means by which the richness of the Dublin Core model might be expressed outwith the limitations of HTML. This document represents a technical report on two specific outcomes from this process; a means by which the model may be considered, extended, tested and manipulated within the Resource Description Framework (RDF); and suggested mechanisms by which both simple and complex Dublin Core might be expressed using the eXtensible Markup Language (XML), the formal syntax of RDF. Although RDF is the 'language' used to express the data model, users are not limited to using only RDF in their own applications. Similarly, although examples throughout this document are expressed in XML, this does not mean the Dublin Core may only be encoded in this way. The following sections introduce the building blocks upon which this document relies, such as XML and RDF. . . Originally developed from very separate ideas, the current convergence of the concepts behind Dublin Core with the syntactic and structural facilities offered by XML and RDF offers a powerful weapon in the arsenal of those manipulating and using the wealth of information with which we are surrounded. Dublin Core offers a means by which diverse resources might be described for discovery in an interdisciplinary context, and XML/RDF provides the structure for unambiguous expression of this Dublin Core information, as well as the straightforward addition of more detailed descriptions from the communities concerned. . ." [from the DC-RDF document]

The Dublin Core Metadata Element Set (the Dublin Core) "is a 15 element metadata set that is primarily intended to aid resource discovery on the Web. The elements in the Dublin Core are TITLE, SUBJECT, DESCRIPTION, CREATOR, PUBLISHER, CONTRIBUTOR, DATE, TYPE, FORMAT, IDENTIFIER, SOURCE, LANGUAGE, RELATION, COVERAGE and RIGHTS. The metadata elements fall into three groups which roughly indicate the class or scope of information stored in them: (1) elements related mainly to the Content of the resource [Title, Subject, Description, Type, Source, Relation, Coverage], (2) elements related mainly to the resource when viewed as Intellectual Property [Creator, Publisher, Contributor, Rights] and (3) elements related mainly to the Instantiation of the resource [Date, Format, Identifier, Language]."

"The Dublin Core Metadata Initiative (DCMI) is a consensus building organization that has relationships in many standards activities. A number of people in the DCMI are active in the W3C (DC is the prototype application that drove the development of the Resource Description Framework, or RDF in the W3C). Our own standardization activities take place in the IETF (RFC 2413 is reference description of the initial version of the Dublin Core), and there are currently formal DC standardization activities underway in CEN (the European information industry standardization forum) and in NISO (the North American information standardization organization)."

[July 09, 2004] DCMI Usage Board Announces Approval of Metadata Terms for Digital Rights Declaration. The Usage Board of the Dublin Core Metadata Initiative (DCMI) has announced approval of the rights-related terms "License" and "Rights Holder." The Dublin Core Metadata Initiative is "an open forum engaged in the development of interoperable online metadata standards that support a broad range of purposes and business models." The Dublin Core Metadata Element Set is a standard for cross-domain information resource description, implemented in markup languages perhaps more widely than any other metadata specification. Version 1.1 has been endorsed as ISO Standard 15836-2003, NISO Standard Z39.85-2001, and CEN Workshop Agreement CWA 13874. The new DCMI term "license" is an element-refinement for "rights" and provides for reference of a legal document giving official permission to do something with the resource. The DCMI recommended best practice is to identify the license using a URI. Examples of such licenses can be found at the Creative Commons web site. The new term "rightsHolder" identifies a Rights Holder as a person or organization owning or managing rights over the resource. The DCMI Recommended best practice for this element is to use the URI or name of the Rights Holder to indicate the entity. The proposal for adding new DCMI rights terms articulates a goal of supporting standard practice concerning rights declarations on the Internet. The design especially recognized that "the recent emergence of the Creative Commons as a clearinghouse for rights declarations affords an opportunity to improve standard practice, particularly for resources that have been developed with the intention of cost-free distribution, but whose creators wish to formally declare various rights." The authors believe that both Creative Commons proponents and Dublin Core adopters "will benefit by having a clear approach to formal rights declaration in a widely adopted metadata framework on the Internet." A growing collection of open source software tools supports the creation of Creative Commons machine-readable licenses and embedding of license metadata within digital objects.

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Last modified: February 27, 2005

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