Difference between revisions of "Case Studies/Open Library"

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|Description=An initiative of the Internet Archive, the Open Library is an open, online, editable catalog that aims to provide a web page for every book ever published. Drawing from existing library catalogs around the world and user contributions, the Open Library has 20 million records to date and provides access to 1.7 million scanned books. All rights to Open Library data are surrendered via CC0.
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|Mainurl=http://openlibrary.org/
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|User_Status=Curator
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|Quote=In my mind, the best part of that decision is that it paves the way for ongoing contributions to be shared without restriction, which is a key to future data proliferation.
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|Quote_Attribution=George Oats, Director of the Open Library and member of the Open Knowledge Foundation’s Working Group on Open Bibliographic Data [http://blog.okfn.org/2010/11/10/opening-up-library-records-at-the-open-library/]
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|Image_Header=http://wiki.creativecommons.org/images/5/52/Open_Library_logo.png
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|Image_attribution=(c) by Open Library
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|importance=High
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|quality=C-Class
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|License_short_name=CC0
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== Overview ==
 
== Overview ==
  
'''Please provide an overview of the work. Describe the author or organization (location, funding/business model, partner organizations), objectives, current projects.'''  
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The Open Library is an online catalog whose goal is to provide a page on the web for every book ever published. The project began in November 2007 and has been inhaling catalog records from some of the biggest libraries in the world ever since. It has well over 20 million edition records online, provides access to 1.7 million scanned versions of books, and links to external sources like WorldCat and Amazon when relevant. Open Library's secondary goal is to get the user as close to the actual document she is looking for as it can, whether that is a scanned version courtesy of the Internet Archive, or a link to Powell's where she can purchase her own copy.
 
 
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Open Library also gives people a URI for a work, an edition or author or other book-ish resource that can be used as a pointer and connector for information about books; a Uniform Resource Identifier.
 
== License Usage ==
 
== License Usage ==
  
'''Please specify the license adopted. How is the license applied? Can you provide any available statistics? What has been the author or organization's experience with Creative Commons licenses so far – what have been the benefits and lessons learned?''' 
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Open Library's catalog was created by the generous donations of libraries who dedicated their data into the public domain. All its data are available for bulk download in original form through the Internet Archive.
  
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All user contributions to the Open Library are also dedicated to the public domain under the Creative Commons [http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ CC0 1.0] Public Domain Dedication. [http://openlibrary.org/help/faq/using#ownership]
  
 
== Motivations ==
 
== Motivations ==
  
'''How did the author or organization first hear about Creative Commons? Why did they choose to license under Creative Commons? Which license did they select and why? Any other issues you may have come across/comments you’d like to make.'''
 
  
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== Technical Details ==
 
== Technical Details ==
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The catalog is available for [http://openlibrary.org/data bulk download] and also available through its [http://openlibrary.org/developers/api API].
  
'''Provide any technical details of the implementation here'''
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== Media ==
  
== Media ==
 
'''Please include any screenshots, logos, links to videos, audio files, press hits, etc. To upload a file, open a separate window and click through [[Special:Upload]].'''
 
  
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Some of the above text adapted from Open Library's [http://openlibrary.org/help/faq FAQ].

Latest revision as of 00:29, 20 April 2011


[[|License User]]
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unspecified
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Adoption date unspecified
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Evaluation Information.png
Page Importance: C-Class
Page Quality: High
An initiative of the Internet Archive, the Open Library is an open, online, editable catalog that aims to provide a web page for every book ever published. Drawing from existing library catalogs around the world and user contributions, the Open Library has 20 million records to date and provides access to 1.7 million scanned books. All rights to Open Library data are surrendered via CC0.

In my mind, the best part of that decision is that it paves the way for ongoing contributions to be shared without restriction, which is a key to future data proliferation. — George Oats, Director of the Open Library and member of the Open Knowledge Foundation’s Working Group on Open Bibliographic Data [1]

Overview

The Open Library is an online catalog whose goal is to provide a page on the web for every book ever published. The project began in November 2007 and has been inhaling catalog records from some of the biggest libraries in the world ever since. It has well over 20 million edition records online, provides access to 1.7 million scanned versions of books, and links to external sources like WorldCat and Amazon when relevant. Open Library's secondary goal is to get the user as close to the actual document she is looking for as it can, whether that is a scanned version courtesy of the Internet Archive, or a link to Powell's where she can purchase her own copy.

Open Library also gives people a URI for a work, an edition or author or other book-ish resource that can be used as a pointer and connector for information about books; a Uniform Resource Identifier.

License Usage

Open Library's catalog was created by the generous donations of libraries who dedicated their data into the public domain. All its data are available for bulk download in original form through the Internet Archive.

All user contributions to the Open Library are also dedicated to the public domain under the Creative Commons CC0 1.0 Public Domain Dedication. [2]

Motivations

Technical Details

The catalog is available for bulk download and also available through its API.

Media

Some of the above text adapted from Open Library's FAQ.