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In working on something else today I realized that I had neglected to
pass on this announcement from NISO last month about the important
forward momentum of the INFO Uniform Resource Identifier (URI) scheme,
which gives us an important new way to reference existing identifiers
and classification schemes in web applications.
 
 
NISO-SPONSORED INFO URI SCHEME GETS THUMBS UP FROM IETF GROUP 
http://www.niso.org/news/releases/pr-InfoURI-11-05.html 
 
Press Contact: Maryann Karinch ([log in to unmask])
T: 970-577-8500 
 
GOAL: MAKE LEGACY IDENTIFIER SCHEMES AN INTEGRAL PART OF WEB
INFRASTRUCTURE
 
After meticulous reviews lasting more than two years, the Internet
Engineering Steering Group (IESG) has approved the proposed INFO Uniform
Resource Identifier (URI) scheme. As a consequence, the Internet Draft
specifying the INFO URO scheme has moved to the Queue of the Internet
Engineering Task Force (IETF) where it awaits formal publication as an
RFC (Request for Comments).* INFO URI solves problems with identifying
information assets, including documents and terms from classification
schemes. The scheme is a consistent and reliable way to represent and
reference such standard identifiers as Library of Congress Control
Numbers on the Web so that these identifiers can be "read" and
understood by Web applications. 
 
Average web users will not see the scheme in action on a computer screen
- for example, info:lccn/2002022641 - because this is an under-the-hood
way of communicating the identity of an information asset to a web
application. 
 
INFO URI was developed by a coalition under the auspices of the National
Information Standards Organization (NISO). NISO members Los Alamos
National Laboratory (LANL) and Online Computer Library Center (OCLC)
worked in partnership with the Nature Publishing Group and British
consulting firm Manifest Solutions to address an identification problem
that was revealed during the NISO standardization of the OpenURL
Framework for Context-Sensitive Services, released early 2005 as
ANSI/NISO Z39.88-2004. A draft for the INFO URI scheme was first
published Sept. 25th, 2003. 
 
Tony Hammond of the Nature Publishing Group, stated, "We see INFO as an
enabling technology for the library, publishing and media communities -
a way to facilitate and speed the growth of the Web as a truly global
information place beyond a basic document repository. The Library of
Congress, the National Library of Medicine, and the Astrophysics Data
Center are among those organizations that have already registered public
namespaces with the INFO Registry." 
 
"INFO URI has the potential to add a missing piece of web-naming
architecture," added Stuart Weibel, Senior Research Scientist at OCLC. 
 
Herbert Van de Sompel, Digital Library Research & Prototyping at LANL's
Research Library, explained, "Legacy identifiers are all around us and
eventually need to be expressed as URIs in order to become usable in Web
applications. In addition, there is a class of identifiers for which one
does not necessarily want a resolution mechanism to be built into the
identifying URI. INFO URI was proposed to provide a home for both and
the INFO URI registry already shows that such a home was much needed." 
 
Describing INFO URI's relevance to next generation Web development,
MacKenzie Smith, Associate Director for Technology, MIT Libraries,
noted, "The Semantic Web provides a way to incorporate important legacy
content into useful Web applications, but first we need a way to refer
to all that content whether it's already on the Web or not. INFO URI is
a big step in that direction, bringing trusted identification systems
into the Semantic Web and helping developers avoid unnecessary confusion
and duplication of effort in finding connections between things. It's a
building block; an acknowledgement that to achieve the vision of the
Semantic Web we need to include identifier systems that don't fit the
Web architecture out-of-the-box but that can still provide enormous
value to users." 
 
The INFO Registry, currently operated by OCLC on behalf of NISO, is
available online at http://info-uri.info/ for receiving new
registrations. This Registry contains information needed by Web
applications to make use of INFO namespaces. Each Registry entry defines
the namespace, the syntax, and normalization rules for the representing
INFO identifiers as URIs, and gives full contact information for the
namespace authority for that entry. Moreover, the INFO Registry has a
Web interface for human use and allows for machine interaction by
supporting RSS feeds and the Open Archives Protocol for Metadata
Harvesting. 
 
About NISO 
 
NISO, a non-profit association accredited by the American National
Standards Institute (ANSI), identifies, develops, maintains, and
publishes technical standards to manage information in our changing and
ever-more digital environment. NISO standards apply both traditional and
new technologies to the full range of information-related needs,
including retrieval, re-purposing, storage, metadata, and preservation.
NISO Standards, information about NISO's activities and membership are
featured on the NISO website http://www.niso.org. 
 
* The Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) codifies the decisions it
comes to in documents called "Requests For Comments." These are almost
universally called by their acronym "RFCs." Many RFCs are the standards
on which the Internet is formed.