onix-pl training on how to access gokb encodings

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Where can I get ONIX-PL Encodings

in GOKb  

ONIX-PL Training Webinar #2� 0�

Todd Carpenter Executive Director

National Information Standards Organization (NISO)

Overview  

A  bit  about  NISO  License  encoding  overview  and  background  Development  of  ONIX-­‐PL  The  NISO  ONIX-­‐PL  Encoding  IniCaCve  Resources  and  quesCons  

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NaConal  InformaCon  Standards  OrganizaCon  

Non-­‐profit  industry  associaCon  accredited  by  ANSI    Mission  of  developing  and  maintaining  technical  standards  related  to  

informaCon,  documentaCon,  discovery  and  distribuCon  of  published  materials  and  media  

Represent  US  interests  in  informaCon  and  documentaCon  to  the  InternaConal  OrganizaCon  of  StandardizaCon  (ISO)  

68  VoCng  Members,  118  LSA  members  as  of  2014  25%  libraries  and  library  organizaCons  35%  publishers  and  publishing  organizaCons  40%  library  systems  suppliers  and  other  intermediaries    Staff:  4  professional  full-­‐Cme  Volunteers:  400+  spread  out  across  the  world  

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What  is  ONIX?  ONIX  is  an  acronym  for  ONline  InformaCon  eXchange    

Suite  of  XML  Schemas  for  represenCng  publishing  industry  product  informaCon  

 

ONIX  -­‐  Books;  ONIX  -­‐  Serials;  ONIX  -­‐  RRO;  ONIX  -­‐  PL    

Maintained  by  EDItEUR  jointly  with  Book  Industry  CommunicaCon  (UK)  &  the  Book  Industry  Study  Group  

 

User  groups  in  Australia,  Canada,  France,  Germany,  Italy,  the  Netherlands,  Norway,  Spain  and  the  Republic  of  Korea  

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What  is  ONIX-­‐PL?  

ONIX  for  PublicaCon  License  (ONIX-­‐PL)  •  A  structure  for  making  the  content  of  a  license  machine-­‐readable  

•  An  XML  format  •  A  tool  to  make  license  terms  and  condiCons  more  accessible  

•  Extensible  so  addiConal  terms  can  be  added  to  dicConary  in  the  future  

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What  is  ONIX-­‐PL?  

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NISO  ONIX-­‐PL  Encoding  IniCaCve  

•  Funded  by  the  generous  support  of  the  Andrew  W.  Mellon  FoundaCon  

•  Grant  begun  in  February,  2013  •  13-­‐month  project  

– Gather  and  encode  up  to  50  licenses  – Deposit  encodings  in  public  repositories  – Provide  training  on  how  to  use  them  

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NISO  ONIX-­‐PL  Encoding  IniCaCve  

•  RaConale:  –  If  we  can  seed  the  community  with  template  licenses  by  undertaking  the  vast  majority  of  the  core  work,  can  we  jump-­‐start  adopCon?  

Every  negoCaCon  starts  with  a  template  and  then  tweaks  them  from  there.      

– Can’t  we  start  with  template  encodings  and  tweak  them?  

ONIX-PL Training Webinar #2� 7�

ONIX-­‐PL  Encoding  IniCaCve:  Why?  

•  ONIX-­‐PL  Languishing  in  a  Catch-­‐22  situaCon  – No  one  to  hear  from,  no  one  to  call  to  

•  Success  of  the  KB+  encodings  of  the  JISC  specific  licenses  for  JISC  members,  but  limits  

•  Availability  of  open  repositories  for  these  data  •  Agreement  by  publishers  to  allow  encodings  of  templates  

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What  is  GOKb?  

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Global  Open  Knowledgebase  (GOKb)      An  freely  available,  community-­‐managed  data  repository  designed  to  support  key  publicaCon  data  about  electronic  resources  as  it  is  represented  within  the  supply  chain    GOKb  partners  include,  Indiana  U.,  Duke  U.,  U.  Penn,  Micigan,  U.  Maryland,  Lehigh  U.,  U.  Chicago,  U.  Florida  and  partnered  with  Kuali  OLE  and  Jisc  (UK)      Funded  by  the  Andrew  W.  Mellon  FoundaCon  

GOKb  

•  <CAVEAT>    

GOKb  is  sCll  in  development  and  the  public  prototype  is  in  a  public  beta  phase.  

<<Informa(on  contained    in  this  presenta(on  may  change>>  

ONIX-PL Training Webinar #2� 11�

Where  to  find  encodings  in  GOKb  

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Where  to  find  encodings  in  GOKb  

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Sign  in  to  GOKb  

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Sign  in  to  GOKb  

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Once  you  have  the  license  encodings  

REMEMBER:    They  are  templates!    

They  will  not  match  the  final  license  you  negoCated  with  the  publisher  

 YOU  need  to  tweak  the  encoding  values  to  match  the  license  terms  you  agreed  on.  

ONIX-PL Training Webinar #2� 29�

Once  you  have  the  license  encodings  

REMEMBER:    They  are  templates!    

They  will  not  match  the  final  license  you  negoCated  with  the  publisher  

 YOU  need  to  tweak  the  encoding  values  to  match  the  license  terms  you  agreed  on.  

ONIX-PL Training Webinar #2� 30�

Once  you  have  the  license  encodings  

Import  the  data  into  your  electronic  resource  management  system.  

 If  you  have  problems,  or  don’t  know  how  to  ingest  the  data,  please  contact  your  ERM  

vendor.  

ONIX-PL Training Webinar #2� 31�

We  need  more  data/support!  

If  your  ERM  system  does  not  support  import  of  ONIX-­‐PL  files….  

 Ask  your  vendor  to  support  this  service!  

 Ask  other  publishers  why  their  license  

templates  aren’t  available!  

ONIX-PL Training Webinar #2� 32�

Thank  you!    

•  DeGruyter  •  Duke  University  Press  •  Elsevier  •  JSTOR  •  Nature  Publishing  Group  •  Oxford  University  Press  •  SAGE  •  Springer  

ONIX-PL Training Webinar #2� 33�

Some  final  thoughts  on  license  expression  Clearly,  communicaCng  license  permissions  and  prohibiCons  to  staff  and  users  is  difficult  

 

License  expression  is  not  a  simple  process    Definite  cost-­‐benefits  analysis  needed    Consider:  –  Desire  for  ambiguity  versus  clarity  –  The  level  of  detail  that  your  organizaCon  needs  –  ONIX-­‐PL  is  not  an  enforcement  mechanism  –  Issues  impacCng  negoCaCon  

 

 

ONIX-PL Training Webinar #2� 34�

ONIX-­‐PL  Training  

•  1st  –  An  IntroducCon  to  Encoding  a  License  in  ONIX-­‐PL  

•  Today  –  ExtracCng  an  ONIX-­‐PL-­‐encoded  license  and  imporCng  it  into  your  ERMS  

•  Tweaking  the  template  to  match  your  negoCated  terms  (Forthcoming)  

ONIX-PL Training Webinar #2� 35�

AddiConal  Resources  •  ONIX-­‐PL  Home  (EDItEUR  website)  

 hpp://Cnyurl.com/ONIX-­‐PL    This  page  includes  the  format  specificaCon  (ONIX-­‐PL  version  1.0)  and  a  data  dicConary,  with  plans  on  schema  release,  support  tools  (including  OPLE).  

•  ONIX-­‐PL  Working  Group  (NISO  website)      hpp://www.niso.org/workrooms/onixpl  

•  NISO  ONIX-­‐PL  Webinar  Slides    hpp://Cnyurl.com/ONIX-­‐PL-­‐1    Slides  from  the  September  10,  2008  webinar,  "ONIX  for  PublicaCons  Licenses  (ONIX-­‐PL):  Simplifying  License  Expression.”  

•  NISO  ONIX-­‐PL  Webinar  Q&A    hpp://Cnyurl.com/ONIX-­‐PL-­‐2  

ONIX-PL Training Webinar #2� 36�

AddiConal  Resources  (2)  •  The  Importance  of  Linking  Electronic  Resources  and  Their  Licence  Terms:  

 A  Project  to  Implement  ONIX  for  Licensing  Terms  for  UK  Academic  InsTtuTons    hpp://Cnyurl.com/ONIX-­‐PL-­‐3    ArCcle  by  Brian  Green  and  Liam  Earney  (Serials  20.3  [Nov.  2007]:  235-­‐239).  This  arCcle  looks  at  the  issues  facing  libraries  as  they  seek  to  manage  and  communicate  rights  negoCated  in  an  ever  increasing  number  of  licenses  for  online  resources.  

•  JISC  ONIX-­‐PL  Website    hpp://Cnyurl.com/ONIX-­‐PL-­‐4    JISC  CollecCons  idenCfied  a  priority  requirement  by  UK  academic  libraries  for  about  80  exisCng  licenses  to  be  available  in  machine-­‐readable  form,  with  full  representaCon  of  the  license,  including  all  clauses  and  usage  rights  expressed.  JISC  is  using  ONIX-­‐PL  and  the  OPLE  ediCng  tools  to  do  this.  

•  ONIX  for  Licensing  Terms  DescripTon  &  FAQ    hpp://Cnyurl.com/ONIX-­‐PL-­‐5  

•  ONIX/ERMI  Mapping  &  Encoding  Format    hpp://Cnyurl.com/ONIX-­‐PL-­‐6  

 

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One  very  last  thing…  

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Image from Will Lion: http://www.flickr.com/photos/will-lion/2646213692/

s

Thank  you!  

 Todd  Carpenter,  ExecuTve  Director  

tcarpenter@niso.org    

NaConal  InformaCon  Standards  OrganizaCon  3600  Clipper  Mill  Road,  Suite  302  BalCmore,  MD  21211  USA  +1  (301)  654-­‐2512  Fax:  +1  (410)  685-­‐5278  www.niso.org  

ONIX-PL Training Webinar #2� 39�

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