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6 - The British Library experience of open metadata licensing

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 June 2018

Neil Wilson
Affiliation:
Head of Collection Metadata at The British Library
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Summary

The British Library and open bibliographic metadata

The British Library is the national library of the UK. Among its core responsibilities set out in the British Library Act 1972 is that of disseminating metadata describing its rich collections and UK publishing output since 1950 via the British National Bibliography (www.bl.uk/bibliographic/natbib.html). This requirement resulted in the Library offering bibliographic metadata services from its foundation. These services were originally operated commercially and were primarily aimed solely at the library community. However, in 2010 the British Library began to develop an open metadata strategy in response to calls from the UK government, such as Putting the Frontline First, which encouraged increased access to public sector data in order to promote transparency, economic growth and research. At the same time there was growing interest in the potential of linked data for improving reach to new users and exploiting new information sources. Such opportunities were felt compelling enough to warrant action despite the significant technical and licensing issues that needed to be addressed.

The new open metadata strategy aimed to remove constraints imposed by restrictive licensing and domain specific library standards (e.g. MARC21) and to develop new modes of access with communities using the metadata. It was believed that proactively enabling the reuse of metadata could increase its community value, improve access to information and culture, while reinforcing the relevance of libraries. However, in order to justify and sustain the initiative in a period of diminishing funding it was important to try to achieve institutional recognition via any licence model selected to support reuse. In addition, a number of risks required active management, notably:

  • • legal risks, for example complex copyright and licensing frameworks that require proactive management of derived metadata licensing to protect against possible liabilities

  • • reputational risks, for example possible perception that the British Library is not satisfying government and community expectations due to variant definitions of ‘open’ data.

  • Rather than create a targeted service that satisfied only one audience segment or a generic offering that risked satisfying none, a multi-track approach was adopted to address the requirements of three core user groups: researchers, linked data users and developers, and libraries.

    Access, standards and licence options were then tailored to the specific needs of these groups.

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    Publisher: Facet
    Print publication year: 2017

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