Difference between revisions of "Case Studies/British Library"

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{{Case Study
 
{{Case Study
|importance=High
 
|quality=C-Class
 
 
|Description=The British Library has released the entire British National Bibliography to the public via the CC0 public domain waiver.
 
|Description=The British Library has released the entire British National Bibliography to the public via the CC0 public domain waiver.
 
|Mainurl=http://openbiblio.net/
 
|Mainurl=http://openbiblio.net/
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|User_Status=Curator
 
|User_Status=Curator
 
|Tag=library, data, CC0
 
|Tag=library, data, CC0
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|Format=Data
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|Country=United Kingdom
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|Quote=We believe this vast dataset of bibliographic records – created and compiled by the British Library over many decades – has a range of applications far beyond its original purpose, its going to be exciting to find out the new uses that organisations and individuals can make of this data
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|Quote_Attribution=Neil Wilson, the British Library’s Head of Metadata Services [http://pressandpolicy.bl.uk/Press-Releases/British-Library-to-share-millions-of-catalogue-records-43b.aspx]
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|importance=High
 +
|quality=C-Class
 
|License_short_name=CC0
 
|License_short_name=CC0
 
|CC_adoption_date=2010
 
|CC_adoption_date=2010
|Format=Data
 
|Country=United Kingdom
 
 
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== Overview ==
 
== Overview ==

Revision as of 18:03, 22 November 2010



License Used
unspecified
Media
Data
Adoption date unspecified
Tags
library, data, CC0
Translations

.


Evaluation Information.png
Page Importance: C-Class
Page Quality: High
The British Library has released the entire British National Bibliography to the public via the CC0 public domain waiver.

We believe this vast dataset of bibliographic records – created and compiled by the British Library over many decades – has a range of applications far beyond its original purpose, its going to be exciting to find out the new uses that organisations and individuals can make of this data — Neil Wilson, the British Library’s Head of Metadata Services [1]

Overview

The British Library released a large set of their bibliographic data into the public domain via the CC0 public domain waiver. This set contains the entire British National Bibliography, which contains data on publishing activity from the United Kingdom and the Republic of Ireland since 1950, and comprises 20% of the entire British Library catalog. [2]. The dataset currently consists of 3 million individual records.

The JISC OpenBibliography project has worked to make this data reusable. The dataset is available as a CKAN package. It is has also "been loaded into a Virtuoso store that is queriable through the SPARQL Endpoint and the URIs that we have assigned each record use the ORDF software to make them dereferencable, supporting perform content auto-negotiation as well as embedding RDFa in the HTML representation." [3]

The data is also available for download at the Internet Archive under CC0: http://www.archive.org/details/BritishLibraryRdf.

License Usage

The British Library has waived its copyrights to the British National Bibliography via the CC0 public domain waiver.

Motivations

The JISC Open Bibliography project writes that,

Agreements such as these are crucial to our community, as developments in areas such as Linked Data are only beneficial when there is content on which to operate. We look forward to announcing further releases and developments, and to being part of a community dedicated to the future of open scholarship.

[4]


Neil Wilson, head of the British Library's Metadata Services, says,

"We believe this vast dataset of bibliographic records – created and compiled by the British Library over many decades – has a range of applications far beyond its original purpose, its going to be exciting to find out the new uses that organisations and individuals can make of this data... As developments such as the semantic web create new and more effective opportunities for researchers to find, manipulate and link information, the availability of good quality data from a trusted source such as the British Library will become increasingly important."

[5]

Impact

Technical Details

Media