Murtha Baca: Ivofvi
Murtha Baca: Ivofvi
Introduction
Murtha Baca
Like metadata itself, the realm of online resources is constantly and rapidly
evolving. Much has changed in the digital information landscape since
the first print edition of this book was published in 1998 and the revised
online version appeared in 2000. The time is right for an updated edition
of this text, intended to give a general introduction to metadata and to
explain some of the key tools, concepts, and issues associated with using
metadata to build authoritative, reliable, and useful digital resources.
Metadata creation is—or should often be—a collaborative effort,
as is this book. For this edition, the three contributors to the 2000 version
wrote updated chapters, and I was fortunate to find a new contributor to
address the crucial issue of rights metadata.
In the first chapter, Anne Gilliland provides an overview of
metadata—its types, roles, and characteristics—as well as facts about
metadata that belie several common misconceptions. She also addresses
current trends in metadata, especially that of metadata created by users
rather than trained information professionals. Activities such as social
tagging, social bookmarking, and the resulting forms of user-created
metadata such as “folksonomies” are playing an increasingly important
role in the realm of digital information.
In the second chapter, Tony Gill discusses metadata as it relates
to resources on the Web. He explains how Web search engines work and
how they use metadata, data, links, and relevance ranking to help users
find what they are seeking and discusses in detail the commercial search
engine that as of this writing has dominated the Web for several years:
Google. He explains the difference between the Visible Web and the
Hidden Web and the important implications and issues relating to making
resources reachable from commercial, publicly available search engines
versus systems that have one or more “barriers” to access—because they
are fee based or password protected or require a particular IP address, or
simply because they are not technically exposed to commercial search
engines. Gill also raises issues relating to open access to digitized materials
and legal obstacles that currently prevent open access to many materials.
http://www.getty.edu/research/conducting_research/standards/intrometadata/