DOI News
October 2003
- DOI to be used to identify scientific data
- DOI to be used in Australian custom-publishing project
- Technology endorsements: DOI and Internet registries
- Customer endorsements: Department of Defense
A new application for Digital Object Identifiers (DOIs) has been initiated with the
launch of a major project made possible by a grant from the German Research
Foundation, which will implement the use of DOIs to persistently identify scientific
data sets. The project is co-ordinated by the World Data Center for Climate
(WDCC) in Hamburg. The German National Library of Science and Technology
(TIB), the world's largest library of science and technology, has joined the
International DOI Foundation to act as the link with DOI system, in a pilot
deployment which will be extensible to any scientific data. This use of DOI will
provide for the effective publication of primary data using a persistent identifier
for long-term data referencing, allowing scientists to cite and re-use valuable
primary data.
A new project has been announced in Australia's trialing DOI to assist the digital
print industry in developing new content delivery methods such as "print on
demand". The aim is to enable organizations such as publishers and content
aggregators to more effectively package and customise content. Copyright
Agency Ltd, a DOI Registration Agency, will lead the project. CAL and its
partners have chosen the university sector to begin trials of DOI-enabled
technology through a series of pilot programs developing an online model for the
delivery of coursepack material to students.
Release 1.0, Esther Dyson's influential monthly report that has covered the
converging worlds of technology, communications and the Internet for more than
25 years, has just published an in depth and very thoughtful coverage of "Online
Registries; The DNS and Beyond". The report has extensive coverage and
evaluation of current approaches: how organizations keep track of things and
people across extended boundaries ("external registries") and interact with things
and people rather than just look them up ("active registries"). Digital Object
concepts and the Handle System (used by DOI) are extremely favourably
reviewed.
Dyson comments that "the Handle System ... offers both better technology and
lessons-learned governance [than DNS] ... it lacks the visibility of the DNS, which
is an order of magnitude larger in the number of things registered ... but there is
now a broader, outward-facing implementation overseen by the International DOI
Foundation".
"The Dept. of Defense is implementing the advanced Knowledge Resource System
to link together heterogeneous repositories of content and we find the DOI to
provide unique capabilities that are essential to the system and the overall
architecture. I would recommend ... the unique functionality of the DOI for
government architecture."
Dr Leslye McDade-Morrison, Office of the Chancellor for Education and
Professional Development, US Dept. of Defense
The DOI is a system for interoperably identifying and exchanging
intellectual property in the digital environment. A DOI assigned to content enhances a content producer's ability to trade electronically. It provides a framework for managing content in any form at any level of granularity, for linking customers with content suppliers, for facilitating electronic commerce, and enabling automated copyright management for all types of media. The International DOI Foundation, a non-profit organization, manages development, policy and licensing of the DOI to registration agencies and technology providers and advises on usage and development of related services and technologies. The DOI system uses open standards with a standard syntax (ANSI/NISO Z39.84) and is currently used by leading international technology and content organizations.
This is a service announcement for the International Digital Object
Identifier Foundation and has been prepared to increase your awareness about important developments to enable digital copyright management of intellectual property. For more information, please send your request to contact@doi.org.
Updated 8 December 2003
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