Open Archives and Open Libraries - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 28
About This Presentation
Title:

Open Archives and Open Libraries

Description:

Open Archives and Open Libraries Thomas Krichel 2003-06-22 – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:98
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 29
Provided by: krichel
Learn more at: http://openlib.org
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Open Archives and Open Libraries


1
Open Archives and Open Libraries
  • Thomas Krichel
  • 2003-06-22

2
who am I?
  • I was an economist.
  • I was a leisure digital librarian.
  • NetEc 1993
  • RePEc 1997
  • I am a geek.
  • I am a visionary.
  • but not St. John the Baptist

3
Who is he?
4
St. IGNUicus
  • A humoristic creation of Richard M. Stallman
    (RMS)
  • RMS is the father of the free software movement
  • a geek
  • a visionary
  • St. IGNUicus shows an emphasis on the moral case
    for free software.

5
moral case and business case
  • Other folks in the free software movement stress
    the need to demonstrate the business case for
    free software.
  • They tend to avoid the word free, because free
    can mean cheap and cheap can mean bad.
  • They use the term "open source software".

6
RMS and us
  • Some of us are already developing and using free
    software.
  • I say we librarians need to learn more from the
    free software movement.
  • We need to make the concepts coming of free
    software more a part of our business.
  • Let us look at a key concept free software.

7
free software according to RMS
  • Free software comes with four freedoms
  • The freedom to run the software, for any purpose
  • The freedom to study how the program works, and
    adapt it to your needs
  • The freedom to redistribute copies so you can
    help your neighbor
  • The freedom to improve the program, and release
    your improvements to the public, so that the
    whole community benefits

8
free speech and free beer
  • Free software does not mean 0
  • The term "free" in free software should be
    interpreted as "freedom to do things with it".

9
what has this to do with us?
  • Just replace free software with free information.
  • Libraries are about free information.
  • But the analogy is not quite as simple.
  • When we talk about free information, we usually
    mean things that we can freely read (download).
    free as in 0
  • We do not usually mean free information as
    information we are free to do things with. Free
    as in freedom.

10
moral and business
  • There is a moral case for free information.
  • We rely on it.
  • There is a business case for free information.
  • We need to make our own.

11
we rely on the moral case
  • The citizen should be informed
  • Individuals in the organization should have free
    access
  • This is how we justify resources given to us.
  • Often, members of the community who pay get
    privileged access.

12
from moral case to business case
  • To form the business case for free information,
    think of "free information" as "freedom to do
    things" rather than 0.
  • Thus libraries can make a crucial business case
    for them as agents who transform information.
  • Recall that there are whole industries out there
    that produces free information.

13
was this seminar not about open archives?
  • Open archives are crucial tools for the
    development of libraries that transform freely
    available information.
  • By analogy to the term "open archives" I will say
    that the "libraries that transform freely
    available information" are "open libraries".
    These are usually digital libraries.

14
what are open archives
  • They are machines that may or may not store
    items.
  • Data or metadata records about these items is
    being made available through a machine interface.
  • One possible interface is defined OAI protocol
    for metadata harvesting. In the following I will
    be assuming that any open archive runs that
    protocol.

15
why do open archives matter
  • Open archives are specifically set up to allow
    machine readable access to information.
  • Thus presumably there is a permission to further
    process the information. "cogito, ergo sum"
    logic.
  • You may think about the act to establish an open
    archive as an early 3rd millennium digital ritual.

16
open archives and open libraries
  • In the early history of open archives, their main
    use is as metadata repositories.
  • We can build a simple open library by aggregating
    contents from many open archives.
  • But we can do more.

17
what do open libraries do?
  • Identify records found in open archives.
  • Relate identified records in open archives with
    each other.
  • These actions require human control.

18
example from RePEc
  • There are 300 archives that contribute to RePEc
    data about publications.
  • That data has author name strings.
  • A special open archive furnishes access control
    records. These records lists author names and
    paper record identifiers of the papers the author
    wrote.
  • This is classic access control, but done by the
    authors.
  • An open archive exports the author data

19
why do authors register?
  • Authors perceive the registration as a way to
    achieve common advertising for their papers.
  • Author records are used to aggregate usage logs
    across RePEc user services for all papers of an
    author.
  • Open archives at the RePEc user services export
    usage data.

20
open library idea serials data
  • Serial level information is a crucial component
    of academic library data.
  • Idea build and maintain free serial records.
  • Two ways to build
  • Use volunteers and collect in a decentralized
    way.
  • Make an expensive central collection, disseminate
    well, charge for record changes later.

21
another open library idea law
  • Much of the legal texts are de jure free.
  • De facto there are two companies who have
    comprehensive collections and charge a lot of
    money for the free information bundled with
    proprietary information.
  • Our moral case calls for a replacement!
  • (it will also create jobs for us)

22
free legal open library
  • Have all laws and cases
  • online (open archives)
  • as text (open archives)
  • identified (open library)
  • Have citation metadata, so that legal citations
    can verified be while composing case data.
  • Registration procedure to verify the integrity of
    data.

23
open library idea II drugs
  • Collect data on the composition of all drugs
  • drugs composition reported by drug companies,
    using open archives
  • drug components documented by the governments,
    using an open archive
  • Open library brings the two together!

24
Am I crazy?
  • Money does not make the world go round. Ideas do.
  • When RMS proposed a free replacement for UNIX in
    the early 80s, most people dismissed the idea.
  • Today it is reality!
  • Similarly, when I started to work on RePEc a
    totally free and improved AI dataset in 1993,
    nobody gave it a high probability to succeed.
  • It will be a reality!

25
obstacles to open archives open libraries
  • lack of imagination
  • lack of entrepreneurship
  • inability to form alliances
  • user-centered thinking
  • document-centered thinking
  • technical competence required
  • OAI PMH
  • XML and XML Schema
  • Unicode
  • the "C" word

26
what I do for open libraries
  • Create an open library for library science the
    rclis (reckless) dataset.
  • Create a supporting organization
  • the open library society.
  • co-workers welcome!

27
conclusion
  • The open library is a business idea to move free
    information powered by libraries from the paper
    to the digital world.
  • Open archives are a sine qua non component of the
    business idea.
  • Open archives furnish information that we are
    free to further process (as opposed to consume).

28
http//openlib.org/home/krichel
  • Thank you for your attention!
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com