RE: Policy type "set" and granting rights (?)

Ø  this use case seems to fit (or need) the inheritance structure of ODRL ?

That would work. As long we don't need to actually specify the ODRL policy that is the parent (since we will rarely have that, in practice).

Regards,

Stuart


From: Renato Iannella [mailto:ri@semanticidentity.com]
Sent: Monday, April 22, 2013 12:03 PM
To: Myles, Stuart
Cc: Michael Steidl; ODRL Community Group
Subject: Re: Policy type "set" and granting rights (?)


On 18 Apr 2013, at 23:15, "Myles, Stuart" <SMyles@ap.org<mailto:SMyles@ap.org>> wrote:


For example, a client of AP might be contracted to take a feed of photos. Let's pretend that feed consists of hundreds of photos a day. For a particular photo within that feed, we need to be able to communicate that it is not allowed to be used by newspapers in the UK. Another photo might require a mandatory credit of the originating agency (e.g. the European Photo Agency). Given that these are not agreements in themselves but are instead to be interpreted as a sort of "exception" or particular set of permissions, restrictions or constraints that must be observed for a particular piece of content, doesn't "set" make the  most sense in that situation?

Sturt  - this use case seems to fit (or need) the inheritance structure of ODRL ?

That is, there is an Agreement A between parties B and C for asset X with Terms Y....then a specific policy is created which inherits from Agreement A for Asset X.1 with new Terms Y.1

?

Cheers...
Renato Iannella
Semantic Identity
http://semanticidentity.com
Mobile: +61 4 1313 2206



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Received on Monday, 22 April 2013 18:30:37 UTC