Metadata Madness

March 30, 2007

after all, why blog about metadata?

Filed under: inspire, iso19115 — metadatamadness @ 8:40 pm

Recently my work has become far too niche, acronym-ridden and full of curious and monotonous purpose to inflict on the Mapping Hacks blog. Recently i helped co-ordinate a free and open source software community response to the draft Implementing Rules for Metadata underlying the INSPIRE directive establishing a spatial data infrastructure in Europe, *deep breath*, and I learned a lot during that process and while trying to follow the corresponding US process of establishment of a new metadata profile based on the ISO19115 standard. A couple of weeks ago I had a look at ISO 19115 in this rough essay written after reading the draft North American Profile for metadata, and I’m not alone in holding a dissenting view on the grounds of overcomplexity and lack of machine-reusability.

I’ve been researching metadata models, exchange interfaces and appropriate standards, for a BitTorrent-based data distribution project with Terradue, using GeoNetwork with a mimimal Dublin Core based profile using GeoRSS and iCal to indicate more specific spatio temporal events, based on a simple model called called DCLite4G, a minimal information model for metadata oriented towards GeoRSS and RDF. This is something i have worked on via wiki and email over the last year with Stefan Keller, based on a collective effort by the Geodata Committee at the Open Source Geospatial Foundation, using the FGDC Core standard model as a reference.

Recently I gave a talk to a cosy geoforum convened by Stefan in Zurich. The slides for my talk (huge 23Mb pdf) are partly more visual illustration than they are narrative of what I was actually saying; I have a half-written essay about “open process” in geodata re-use and redistribution which I’ll post here when it’s done.

At the Open Knowledge Foundation Rufus has been doing some good work on a web interface for a testable generic metadata repository service for data packages, with transparent versioning in the backend. I hope at some point the work on geospatial data contribution and search services, with the advice of people in the “information retrieval” community, will connect up with this sort of thing.

So I would like to talk on a blog about all this sort of thing and consider that if even just three people really connect with it, the time spent writing it will have been totally worthwhile.

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