[OpenGLAM] Restyling the Open Collections area on the GLAM site

everbruggen at beeldengeluid.nl everbruggen at beeldengeluid.nl
Wed Nov 12 17:21:17 UTC 2014


Hi all,

Okay Marieke, curious to hear how it goes. As for displaying Omeka feeds in WP, there’s this older plug-in: https://wordpress.org/plugins/display-omeka-metadata/ - let me know if that’s in any way helpful.

Kind regards,
Erwin



On 12 nov. 2014, at 17:24, Joris Pekel <joris.pekel at europeana.eu> wrote:

> Hi all,
> 
> Really cool to see this. 
> Quickly wanted to make note about the 2M PD objects from the BNF. Although they label them as such, they are actually restricted from some form of re-use. Their terms of use mention: "Commercial re-use of this content is not free and is subject to a license. Is heard by commercial reuse resale of content in the form of processed products or service delivery."
> 
> See: http://gallica.bnf.fr/html/conditions-dutilisation-des-contenus-de-gallica
> 
> They use a law from the 70's to achieve that. So where they say it is 'open', this collection would definitely not fit the criteria to become an open collection - unfortunately. Would be great if we could find a way to convince them to drop this restriction!
> 
> Cheers,
> 
> Joris
> 
> On 11 November 2014 16:26, Tom Morris <tfmorris at gmail.com> wrote:
> On Mon, Nov 10, 2014 at 8:09 AM, Maarten Zeinstra <mz at kl.nl> wrote:
> 
> I always like to play with the Europeana API when I see these kinds of questions.
> 
> I made a simple overview of all collections on Europeana that are completely open (where all objects are either PDM, CC0, CC BY, CC BY-SA), there are exactly 100 of the 746 data providers on Europeana that qualify for this. You can find them in an overview here: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/10c8JT1-lQbuMFwRs61-q3TQUJOdi-jyQWOMuHJFCMs0/edit?usp=sharing
> 
> Cool!
>  
> When you want to check out a collection simply copy the content of a cell in the first column and replace <REPLACE ME> in the URL: http://www.europeana.eu/portal/search.html?query=DATA_PROVIDER%3A%22<REPLACE ME>%22
> 
> That sounds like the kind of menial task that computers are good at, so I added a column to the spreadsheet with the URL in it:
> https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1nA2-fEU_BQ41Kuq59oAPxm6H6mOpOMHhi3zvRalR8d0/edit?usp=sharing
> 
> It's worth reviewing the actual numbers and collections rather than just depending on the color coding because the top three non-green entries have only one or two non-free works each and would be in the top ten free collections without that work.
> 
> Europeana 1914-1918 has 145,000 free digital objects, but for some reason decided to reserve rights to four paragraphs describing the overall exhibit.
> Riksantikvarieämbetet has 130,000 free digital objects and the single CC-BY-ND listing in Europeana is apparently an error, because when you click through to the original it's marked PD
> Rijksmuseum has 180,000 free digital objects and the two 
> 
> Even institutions with larger numbers of non-free works are worth a look.  Although BNF has over 45,000 works with rights reserved, it has more than 2 million public domain works.  Do we really want to ignore those two million works or criticize them for only achieving 98% freedom for their collection?
> 
> I sorted my copy of the spreadsheet by total number of free works to give slightly different view of who's doing the most good (but both percentages and absolute numbers are useful metrics).
> 
> Tom
> 
> 
> 
> 
> -- 
> Joris Pekel
> Community Coordinator Cultural Heritage
>  
> T: +31 (0)70 314 0134
> E: joris.pekel at europeana.eu
> Skype: jpekel
> Twitter: @jpekel
> 
> Europeana makes Europe’s culture available for all, across borders and generations and for creative re-use – follow how at #AllezCulture 
> 
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