RE: British Library

Dear Colleagues


Thank you for those of you who fed back.

I have some further questions – wanted to check how we might use some of the terms.


1.    There doesn’t appear to be a term for download – have we missed something?





2.    In terms of consistency the terms that we have specced are as follows(there are some we have defined that we can find no match for), and I was wondering if people thought our potential use was consistent with how envisaged:



Index   -           To prevent the materials being indexed by a Search Engine



Print -              To allow or disallow print



Distribute         To allow / disallow an object to be exported elsewhere and / or embedded into a third part viewer.



Concurrent Use          To control how many people can access the same object at the same time.







What we didn’t see but have in our spec is:



Upload

Full text search (allowable / disallowable)

Cite / Link (To allow or disallow an item to be linked to via a url / unique identifier etc.)





Kind regards



Ben



From: White, Ben
Sent: 25 November 2015 09:19
To: 'public-odrl@w3.org'
Subject: British Library

Dear All

This is the first time I am posting here. Hello!

The  British Library is building a digital store (which we call the Digital Library System) and as part of its architecture are wishing to employ ODRL.

As you can imagine we need to manage all sorts of digital objects ranging from public domain items, electronic legal deposit items (which in the UK have rather oddly been divorced from copyright law so live in their own parallel rights universe), creative commons materials, through to purchased journal subscriptions, sound recordings in the national sound archive and orphan works. And much more.

We have taken a quick look at the ODRL vocabulary and are trying to understand it more in order to be able to translate it into the vocabulary we have been using over the last 2 years in the context of building our own digital rights management systems.

I wonder if colleagues would be kind enough to look at the questions in the attached and let me know what you think?

Of course the issue with rights is it is often not so black and white but any help you can give us would be gratefully received.

Kind regards


Ben



P Please consider the environment and do not print this email unless absolutely necessary. Encourage environmental awareness!
Benjamin White | Head of Intellectual Property | British Library | 96 Euston Road, London, NW1 2DB | T +44 207 412 7307|W www.bl.uk<http://www.bl.uk> | E ben.white@bl.uk<mailto:ben.white@bl.uk>



******************************************************************************************************************
Experience the British Library online at www.bl.uk<http://www.bl.uk/>
The British Library’s latest Annual Report and Accounts : www.bl.uk/aboutus/annrep/index.html<http://www.bl.uk/aboutus/annrep/index.html>
Help the British Library conserve the world's knowledge. Adopt a Book. www.bl.uk/adoptabook<http://www.bl.uk/adoptabook>
The Library's St Pancras site is WiFi - enabled
*****************************************************************************************************************
The information contained in this e-mail is confidential and may be legally privileged. It is intended for the addressee(s) only. If you are not the intended recipient, please delete this e-mail and notify the postmaster@bl.uk<mailto:postmaster@bl.uk> : The contents of this e-mail must not be disclosed or copied without the sender's consent.
The statements and opinions expressed in this message are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of the British Library. The British Library does not take any responsibility for the views of the author.
*****************************************************************************************************************
Think before you print

Received on Monday, 14 December 2015 10:39:59 UTC