
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
http://dublincore.org - 11 July 2000 - The Dublin Core Metadata Initiative (DCMI), an organization leading the development of international standards to improve electronic resource management and information discovery, today announced the formal recommendation of the Dublin Core (DC) Qualifiers. The addition of the DC Qualifiers enhances the semantic precision of the existing DC Metadata Element Set.
"Think of Legos. The close tolerances of these simple toys ensure all the different Lego themes, built at different times, can work together smoothly. Dublin Core is the basic Lego block for promoting discovery of resources on the Web: a simple and interoperable foundation upon which many information solutions can be built. The introduction of Dublin Core Qualifiers is like adding color and themes to the Legos - it helps enrich the description of information resources on the Internet" said Stuart Weibel, DCMI Director.
The DC Qualifiers build upon the DC Metadata Element Set, which provides 15 categories to describe resources on the Web - a catalog card with new dimensions. Known as the Dublin Core, the metadata model has become the de facto standard for description of information on the Internet.
For the past year, working groups of the Dublin Core developed these newly agreed upon refinements to the catalog card to give better access to information we seek. In essence, the new recommendations for Dublin Core Qualifiers increase the effectiveness of metadata by giving it finer granularity. For example, a publication's date, which would be the Dublin Core Metadata Element, may be further detailed as a particular type of date by using a Dublin Core Qualifier such as date last modified, date created, or date issued.
Dublin Core's Usage Committee today launches the next step toward a cohesive metadata standard. The DC Qualifiers improve interpretation of metadata values and can be easily recorded or transferred into HTML, XML, RDF or relational databases. The evolution of DC Qualifiers draws from the input of many individuals across a broad array of disciplines.
Users include museum informatics specialists, archivists, digital library researchers, libraries, and government information providers and a variety of content providers. Their efforts have led standards organizations, such as NISO (National Information Standards Organization) in the U.S. and CEN in Europe (European Committee for Standardization) to view the DC Metadata Element Set as a benchmark candidate for simple resource description on the Internet. More recently, new sectors, such as education and industry, have been attracted to Dublin Core's simplicity, multilingual scope, consensus philosophy and widespread adoption.
More information about the new recommendation can be found at: http://dublincore.org/documents/dcmes-qualifiers/
The metadata for this press release can viewed at: http://dublincore.org/news/pr-20000711.shtml.rdf
"The ratification of Dublin Core Qualifiers is an important
milestone that will improve the usefulness of Dublin Core
metadata for libraries and the greater Internet community. OCLC
is pleased to host the Dublin Core Metadata Initiative as part
of its continuing commitment to global open standards which
facilitate international knowledge access. We expect the Dublin
Core to play an important role in bridging traditional library
cataloging and Internet resource description."
-- Jay Jordan, CEO, OCLC Online Computer Library Center,
Inc.
"I'm delighted to see this important next step on the Dublin
Core Metadata Initiative's program, which begins to map the
path between the lowest-common-denominator unqualified elements
and the need for greater precision in many actual applications.
This is a relatively short document, but it distills an
enormous amount of thinking, discussion and hard work by a
worldwide community concerned with metadata, and the consensus
it captures represents a substantial accomplishment."
-- Clifford Lynch, Executive Director, Coalition for Networked
Information.
"The Dublin Core qualifiers establish an important precedent
for the "best-practice" use of the Dublin Core Element Set. The
W3C work on the Resource Description Framework (RDF)
anticipated from its very beginning the need within the Dublin
Core framework to use qualifiers to represent encoding schemes
as well as vocabulary refinement. The adoption of this set of
qualifiers leads the way for more widespread use of the Dublin
Core to describe materials on the Web in greater detail."
-- Ralph R. Swick, Technical Director, Technology and Society
Domain, World Wide Web Consortium.
"Most Dublin Core implementation projects have always used
element qualifiers. To current and future Dublin Core users,
agreement on core Qualifiers is a hallmark event which can only
be compared with completion of the 15 basic Dublin Core
Metadata Elements. Now, with both Elements and their Qualifiers
in place, Dublin Core is a much more powerful and versatile
tool."
-- Juha Hakala, Development Director, Helsinki University
Library.
"Implementers of Internet search engines are certain to
welcome the most recent development of the Dublin Core
standard. In Australia, Dublin Core is being used to support
access to information resources by governments, the museum and
library communities, and a number of projects within academia.
The approval of standard qualifiers will be welcomed by these
communities and ensure improved interoperability in the
discovery of Internet resources."
-- Dr. Warwick Cathro, Assistant Director-General of the
National Library of Australia.
"Melbourne IT's clients register domain names to move their
businesses and other activities online. Their goal of realizing
the potential of the Web can be fulfilled by Dublin Core. It
delivers relevance to the information end-users seek. Today, we
are well placed to implement the new Dublin Core standards in
our own developments and to advise our clients as to how they
can benefit from using them."
-- Peter Gerrand, CEO of Melbourne IT.
"With the general adoption and the publication of the Dublin
Core Qualifiers, Dublin Core establishes itself as a reliable
international metadata standard. I am pleased that this
consolidation process, with its great importance for libraries,
museums, archives and many other communities, was set in motion
during the 7th Dublin Core Workshop in Frankfurt."
-- Dr. Elisabeth Niggeman, Director, Die Deutsche
Bibliothek.
ABOUT THE DUBLIN CORE METADATA INITIATIVE [DCMI]
The Dublin Core Metadata Initiative is an open forum engaged since 1995 in the development of interoperable online metadata standards that support a broad range of purposes and business models. Its primary offering, the Dublin Core Metadata Element Set, is the de-facto worldwide standard for the description of information resources across disciplines and languages. DCMI's activities include consensus-driven working groups, global workshops, conferences, standards liaison, and educational efforts to promote widespread acceptance of metadata standards and practices. Representatives from industries worldwide are active contributors to the DCMI; participation is open to practitioners and theoreticians from the public, private and not-for-profit sectors. Further information on DCMI, the Dublin Core family of specifications and various online metadata solutions can be found at http://purl.org/dc/
The 8th Dublin Core Metadata Initiative Workshop, hosted by the National Library of Canada and the International Federation of Library Associations and sponsored by OCLC, the Coalition for Networked Information, and the National Science Foundation, will be held the 4th through the 6th of October and will help shape the future of metadata, implementation and evolution of the standard. To register, please visit http://www.ifla.org/udt/dc8/call.htm
Dublin Core Metadata for this Press Release, represented in RDF:
<?xml version="1.0" ?>
<rdf:RDF
xmlns:rdf="http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#"
xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/">
<rdf:Description
rdf:about="http://purl.org/DC/pressreleases/qualifiers20000711.htm">
<dc:title>Dublin Core Metadata Initiative - Press
Release: Dublin Core
Releases Recommended Qualifiers</dc:title>
<dc:description>The Dublin Core Metadata Initiative, an
organization
leading
the development of international standards to improve
electronic resource
management and information discovery, today announced the
formal
recommendation of the Dublin Core
Qualifiers.</dc:description>
<dc:creator>Stuart Weibel</dc:creator>
<dc:creator>Eric Miller</dc:creator>
<dc:contributor>Jay Jordan</dc:contributor>
<dc:contributor>Clifford
Lynch</dc:contributor>
<dc:contributor>Ralph R.
Swick</dc:contributor>
<dc:contributor>Juha Hakala</dc:contributor>
<dc:contributor>Dr. Warwick
Cathro</dc:contributor>
<dc:contributor>Peter
Gerrand</dc:contributor>
<dc:contributor>Dr. Elisabeth
Niggemann</dc:contributor>
<dc:contributor>ZOT Group</dc:contributor>
<dc:publisher>Dublin Core Metadata
Initiative</dc:publisher>
<dc:date>2000-07-11</dc:date>
<dc:format>text/html</dc:format>
<dc:language>en</dc:language>
<dc:type>press release</dc:type>
</rdf:Description>
</rdf:RDF>
###
Copyright © 1995-2013 DCMI. All Rights Reserved.