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Norman Paskin International DOI Foundation
DOI System: overview Norman Paskin International DOI Foundation
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Introduction Overview: 5 minute animation then: More information on key points Q and A
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DOI = Digital Object Identifier (system) ®
Who? DOI = Digital Object Identifier (system) ® International DOI Foundation (“IDF”) Common operations and governing organisation: RAs = DOI Registration Agencies members of IDF offering the DOI system to customers who wish to assign DOIs to offer a DOI-based service to users
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Status Foundation launched to develop system in 1998. An ISO standard: ISO 26324 Currently used by c. 11,000 naming authorities (assigners) e.g. 3,000 STM publishers, science data sets, entertainment industry, EU documents, etc. 87 million DOIs assigned to date Via 9+ RAs (international) DOI services provided by RAs: build on DOI system Initial applications mainly are simple redirection to a URL. More sophisticated functionality available e.g. multiple resolution
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Scope Digital Identifier of an Object Object = any entity (thing: physical, digital, or abstract) Resources, parties, licences, etc. Initial focus was documents/media e.g. articles, data sets. Now also moving into parties and licences. Extending to other sectors Digital Identifier = network actionable identifier (“click on it and do something”) Extensible by design: not intended as a publishing-only solution (digital convergence) Work with existing tools and data International: RAs worldwide.
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What it does Managed DOI Content Content DOI system DOI directory DOI
The DOI System The DOI System Overview Overview DOI URL What it does Managed DOI Content DOI system DOI directory DOI directory Content 6
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What it does provides a resolvable, persistent, interoperable link: resolvable – standard identifier syntax + network resolution mechanism (Handle System) persistent – through: technical infrastructure (registry database, proxy support, etc) social infrastructure (obligations by Registration Agencies) interoperable - through a data model (semantic interoperability)
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International DOI Foundation Provides common infrastructure
The DOI System The DOI System Overview Overview Governance International DOI Foundation Provides common infrastructure Technical: resolution, data model Social: e.g. obligations for persistence, back-up, in event of failure, etc. Deals with common issues Standardisation, liaisons, etc. Outreach to new communities “Not for profit” membership federation Registration Agencies are biggest part of membership Elected Board, working groups, meetings No full time staff (outsourced) 8
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RAs and the DOI business model
The DOI System The DOI System Overview Overview RAs and the DOI business model RAs are autonomous and independent of each other RAs business model with their customers is decided by the RA RAs obligation to IDF is a licence/operating agreement All RAs share costs of common infrastructure (IDF) All RAs implement standard DOI system RAs can add their own services on top RAs may choose to put DOIs “under the hood” or make explicit that this is “Driven by DOI” Some RAs are commercial; most are themselves member communities (e.g. CrossRef, EIDR, DataCite) 9
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Technical infrastructure
The DOI System The DOI System Overview Overview Technical infrastructure Handle system: persistent identification in digital networks Data model: principles for interoperability of data in e-commerce systems Both used elsewhere: aim was to not re-invent the wheel Handle: Data Model: indecs. Linked Content Coalition 10
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DOI uses Handle to resolve to data
The DOI System The DOI System Overview Resolution DOI uses Handle to resolve to data Schematic of a DOI Handle record DOI Value(s) Data type Index Data value 10.123/456 URL 1 Prefix Suffix URL 2 XML 3 <some XML> HS_ADMIN 100 acme.admin/jsmith XYZ 12 Each DOI has one or more Handle values (type:value) Resolution can return all values, or all values of one type 11
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DOI Handle technical infrastructure
Beijing (1) Tokyo(1) Taipei (1) Denver (1) Boston (1) Reston (2) Herndon (15) Bologna (2) Zurich (1) Hanover (2) Singapore – Amazon Cloud (9) London - Rackspace Cloud (9) DOI Handle Servers (46 servers in 12 locations)
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Data model: high level People Content Deals
The DOI System Overview Data model: high level High level model (from indecs) People make Content use Deals about do
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Data model: in more detail
The DOI System The DOI System Data Model Overview Figure 1 Data model: in more detail COA MetaModel Overview Descriptor Descriptor Role Agent Resource Role Role Role Name Name Verb Verb Identifier Identifier Every Relationship has a Relator Relator Context Annotation Relator Annotation Category Category Flag Role Time Place Flag Role Role Role Quantity Quantity EntityTypes AttributeTypes EntityTypes AttributeTypes An Entity may have typed relationships An Entity may have Attributes of any kind. An Entity may have typed relationships An Entity may have Attributes of any kind. with Entities of any kind (Attributes, which are a type of Resource, with Entities of any kind (Attributes, which are a type of Resource, (including those of its own kind) may have their own Attributes). (including those of its own kind) may have their own Attributes). Contextual Relationships Non Contextual Relationships (illustrative: any Type of Entity may relate to any other) Attributes (illustrative: any Entity or Attribute may have Attr ibutes of any type) 14
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Each DOI has some basic metadata
The DOI System The DOI System Overview Overview Data Model – end result Each DOI has some basic metadata All DOIs have this “kernel” Metadata is held and managed by the RA Common model for DOI System More metadata can be added Appropriate to an RA or DOI service Some groups of DOIs will have the same metadata terms Extensible to any level needed Can use existing metadata and map it to DOI DOIs with the same service or same metadata can be grouped and managed as a class 15
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Social infrastructure
The DOI System The DOI System Overview Overview Social infrastructure Shared development – e.g. APIs, etc Shared tools e.g. running mirror servers Obligations for persistence: To customers (within the RA) In event of failure, etc.(beyond the RA) Collaborate Enable shared DOI services where practical A customer could use more than one DOI service 16
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Through TC46/SC9 (“Information and Documentation”) – same as ISBN etc.
The DOI System The DOI System Overview Overview Standardisation ISO 26324: 2012. Through TC46/SC9 (“Information and Documentation”) – same as ISBN etc. ISO standard contains basic specification DOI Handbook and procedures has more detail of implementation Other standards: URI (DOI via http proxy) URN 17
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DOI and other identifier schemes
The DOI System The DOI System Overview Overview DOI and other identifier schemes DOI has strong focus on interoperability and on working with existing and new schemes. Can take an existing identifier and make it a DOI: Use the existing identifier in a DOI suffix; or Define “same as” identifier in the DOI metadata Enables re-use of registries, metadata, etc. Must be certain that the existing ID and the DOI refer to the same thing (easiest with an existing registry) Complicated in digital content: abstractions (e.g. current version or dated version; abstract work or specific edition; etc.) Not always “same as” Community and proprietary issues See “Identifier Interoperability” fact sheet 18
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DOI RAs and data DOI registration process DOI registration process
Kernel metadata DOI registration process Metadata for Service 1 Optional specific services driven by DOI Metadata for Service 2 Non-DOI Service The RA manages: the registration of the DOI kernel metadata (same for all DOIs) additional metadata (specific to a DOI application or “Service”) May run multiple DOI application services May run other (non-DOI) services
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Interoperability between DOI RAs
DOI Registration Kernel metadata Additional metadata for Service A RA #1 DOI Registration Kernel metadata Additional metadata for Service B RA #2 X To use a DOI in both service A and service B: Registrant must register a DOI with both RAs; or Better: RA and RA arrange to share information/services; or Ideal: automated sharing of the DOI record across RAs Technical interoperability can be helped by tools Community interoperability (sharing and managing data) is the bigger problem
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Choosing which RA to register with
DOI Registration Kernel metadata Additional metadata for Service A RA #1 DOI Registration Kernel metadata Additional metadata for Service B RA #2 DOI RAs are non-exclusive – anyone can use any RA to register a DOI e.g. in China: ISTIC and CNKI both offer DOI Registration BUT to use service A, choose to register your DOI with the RA that runs service A Only that RA will have an interest in the specific set of metadata for that use e.g. to use the audiovisual registry for film/broadcast = go to EIDR Not all DOIs offer every service Sometimes services (and so RAs) overlap: Because a new specialised service comes onto the market (e.g. data citation) Or because of competition (Service A and service B have the same aim) Or because of fuzziness of categories DOI RAs succeed because of the SERVICES they offer, not because they register DOIs
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Quick summary: “Key facts on DOI system” factsheet
The DOI System The DOI System Overview Overview Documentation Website: Quick summary: “Key facts on DOI system” factsheet Other Factsheets – more topics in detail: DOI Handbook 22
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DOI Update N PaskinThe DOI System
IDF Meeting June Overview Norman Paskin
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