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Support DCMI Activities

Why Support DCMI?

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DCMI is a not-for-profit organization committed to the development and open availability of resources that support a healthy global metadata ecosystem. Your contributions help ensure that DCMI can continue to advance this commitment through its support of innovation in metadata design and best practices for the global metadata community. In addition to the efforts of a broad community of volunteer metadata experts, the work of DCMI requires dedicated, paid effort. These paid efforts include:

You can support the work of DCMI in general or by targeting your donation to a specific DCMI activity of particular interest to you.
  1. General Donation—One-off & Subscription (throughout PayPal):

    Make a one-off donation with your credit card.


    Contribute monthly with your credit card.


    The credit card charge through PayPal will appear as "Dublin Core Metadata Initiative" on your credit card statement.

  2. Targeted Donation:

    To donate to a specific DCMI Work Theme or to Conference Fellowships, pick the desired ChipIn form to the left—it's simple! Work Themes and Conference Fellowships are described below.

For other ways to give, please contact us.


Donate to Conference Fellowships

Donations to the Conference Fellowships fund will be allocated to select attendees to the DCMI International Conference on Dublin Core and Metadata Applications. Funds are intended to help defray travel expenses and registration fees. Determinations of scholarship awards are made by a subcommittee of the Advisory Board. Selection criteria include financial need and potential benefit to the recipients through attendance. Recipients will be asked to assist with session-related activities during the conference.

Click the ChipIn icon to support Conference Fellowships


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Donate to Current Work Themes

By making a work theme donation through ChipIn!, you both support the specific work of the theme and 'vote' regarding which theme or themes are most important to you. In general, work theme donations support the granting of stipends to community members who take on editorial responsibilities for specific work themes.

Platform-independent Application Profiles

The DCMI Abstract Model (DCAM), published as a DCMI Recommendation in 2007, provides an abstract syntax for packaging Semantic-Web-compatible data in validatable record formats. DCAM was designed to bridge the modern paradigm of the unbounded Linked Data graph and the more familiar paradigm of the validatable metadata record, locally managed and constrained using a myriad of software platforms and implementation technologies. For five years, DCAM has inspired a wide range of deployment experiences, and the core RDF standards themselves continue to be extended. The activity "platform-independent application profiles" is re-evaluating the need and requirements for a common language to express metadata design patterns, both as templates for Linked-Data-compatible data formats and as reference points for creating and consuming coherent metadata within communities of discourse and practice.

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Mapping Diverse Vocabularies

While DCMI Metadata Terms and other core vocabularies increase the coherence of metadata by providing shared reference points, the unavoidable proliferation of diverse but overlapping vocabularies threatens to create metadata silos. A key part of the solution is to create machine-readable mappings. The activity "mapping diverse vocabularies" aims at mapping DCMI metadata terms to related terms in other vocabularies. In the absence of well-established practices for publishing and maintaining such mappings, this activity aspires to establish a workflow and publication practices that can be adopted by other vocabulary maintainers. The starting point for this activity is a mapping to the terms defined by the Schema.org initiative.

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Sustainable Vocabularies

As a foundation for applications, the value of any given vocabulary depends on the perceived certainty that the vocabulary—both its machine-readable schemas and human-readable specification documents—will remain reliably accessible over time and that its URIs will not be sold, re-purposed, or simply forgotten. In order to raise awareness of this issue, DCMI has formulated an agreement with the FOAF Project, which is owned by individuals, with contingency plans for transferring maintenance control in the short or long term should exigent circumstances require. This activity examines the issues around vocabulary sustainability and governance with the goal of formulating best practices and, ultimately, of ensuring that our vocabularies will be preserved by society's long-term memory institutions.

Monitor & participate in this activity:

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