Standards de métadonnées sur les droits
Quelques sources:
Open Archives Initiative
- ResourceSync specification describes a synchronization framework for the web consisting of various capabilities that allow third-party systems to remain synchronized with a server’s evolving resources => search for « access »
- Open Archives Initiative Protocol for Metadata Harvesting – Section 2.5 Record
- Open Archives Initiative Object Reuse and Exchange (OAI-ORE) defines standards for the description and exchange of aggregations of Web resources.
Dublic Core
- Dublin Core Metadata Element Set: rights, source…
- Dublin Core Metadata Initiative DCMI Metadata Terms
Publishing Requirements for Industry Standard Metadata PRISM Metadata from ideaalliance
- PRISM Contract Management Metadata Specification (Version 3.1; March 27, 2015)
- PRISM Usage Rights Metadata Specification (Version 3.0; October 4, 2012)
The Library of Congress >> Standards >> Metadata Encoding and Transmission Standard (METS) Draft Rights Declaration Schema
<amdSec> elements contain the administrative metadata pertaining to the files comprising a digital library object, as well as that pertaining to the original source material used to create the object. There are four main forms of administrative metadata provided for in a METS document: 1. Technical Metadata (information regarding files’ creation, format, and use characteristics), 2. Intellectual Property Rights Metadata (copyright and license information), 3. Source Metadata (descriptive and administrative metadata regarding the analog source from which a digital library object derives), and 4. Digital Provenance Metadata (information regarding source/destination relationships between files, including master/derivative relationships between files and information regarding migrations/transformations employed on files between original digitization of an artifact and its current incarnation as a digital library object). Each of these four different types of administrative metadata has a unique subelement within the <amdSec> portion of a METS document in which that form of metadata can be embedded: <techMD>, <rightsMD>, <sourceMD>, and <digiprovMD>. Each of these four elements may occur more than once in any METS document.
J. Paul Getty Trust > Practical Principles for Metadata Creation and Maintenance
9. Research and documentation of rights metadata must be an integral part of an institution’s metadata work flow. This metadata should be captured and managed in an appropriate information system that is available to the all of the individuals in the organization who need to contribute to it as well as those who need to use it. (See “Rights Metadata Made Simple.”)
Metadata Guidelines – UMass Amherst Libraries
March 2013, p. 29-30
Access, Use, and Rights
Recommended Dublin Core map: rights
(Recommended, Repeatable, Free-text)
Overview
Access, Use, and Rights provides information about the conditions that affect the availability of the resource or about the rights associated with resources.
- Provide access or use information in the most granular form.
- The audience for this element is the end-user, so use clear language free of legal or library jargon.
- This element may be used to describe a lack of use restrictions.
- Provide rights information in the most granular form.
- The audience for this element is the end-user, so use clear language free of legal or library
- jargon.
- State any restrictions on use of the resource.
- If the resource is in the public domain, state the lack of copyright restrictions.
- Metadata Guidelines 30
- A link may be provided instead of or in addition to the content.
- Provide contact information for use by end users who wish to pursue required permissions for
- publication, dissemination, etc.
- The <rights> container available in the OAI protocol should not be used to describe rights
pertaining to the resource, but to describe rights pertaining to the metadata. See
DLF’s Expressing Rights for Metadata within the OAI Protocol for more information.
More guidance can be found in your chosen Content Standard.
Access, Use, and Rights expressed in select metadata schema
- Dublin Core, see Rights
- EAD Conditions Governing Access (<accessrestrict> or <userestrict>)
- MODS accessCondition, use with type=“restriction on access”
- MODS accessCondition, use with type=“use and reproduction”
- VRA Core 4.0 Element Description and Tagging Examples (PDF), see Rights
- MARC 506 Restrictions on Access Note (R)
- MARC 540 Terms Governing Use and Reproduction Note (R)
- DLF’s Guidelines for Shareable Metadata: Recording Rights Statements about Resources
Open Digital Rights Language (ODRL) Information Model 2.2
Recommandation du W3C (15 février 2018)
Ce contenu a été mis à jour le 2018-11-04 à 8 h 25 min.