Hello, everyone -


Just passing along a couple more free online linked data events that might be 
of interest to some of you; see below for details.



- Demian







Historical Bibliographic Data in 
Wikidata<https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/User:Marianika/Linked_Pasts_VII>
2021-12-13, 18:00-19:00 (CET) online
2021-12-15, 20:00-22:00 (CET) online
Linked Pasts VII<https://www.ghentcdh.ugent.be/linked-pasts-vii-symposium>
free registration<https://congrezzo.ugent.be/linked-pasts-vii/>



***
A Wikimedian and an academic team up to share historical bibliographic data on 
Wikidata and discover all the richness of translating an already intricate 
custom data model to FRBR for Wikidata.



Demonstration: Monday 13 December 2021. 17:00-18:00 GMT/18:00-19:00 CET
Conversation: Wednesday 15 December 2021. 19:00-21:00 GMT/20:00-22:00 CET



Sign up for free at 
https://congrezzo.ugent.be/<https://congrezzo.ugent.be/linked-pasts-vii/>
No Wikidata experience required



Looking forward to meeting you there, or in further discussions about 
bibliographic data modelling!



If you are interested, regardless of whether you can attend or not, please edit 
this Wikidata 
page<https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/User:Marianika/Historical_Bibliographic_Data>
 to add your name and/or project.



Historical Bibliographic Data in 
Wikidata<https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/User:Marianika/Linked_Pasts_VII>

The promise of Linked Open Data can only be fulfilled with persistent 
identifiers, but libraries only put them out for editions, not works. Wikidata 
is a space where persistent identifiers can be created for works to enable us 
to share our data across databases. However, various data models are currently 
in use for bibliographic data in Wikidata. Is this a problem?



In the first session (demonstration), Simon Cobb will present bibliographic 
data in Wikidata from two different projects, the first in the simplified 
work/edition model used in Wikidata, the second using FRBR. Marie Léger-St-Jean 
will explain choices regarding the data model of her database Price One 
Penny<http://priceonepenny.info/database/> used in the second project.

In the second session (conversation), participants are invited to bring along a 
visualization of their data model so we can share our different bibliographic 
data models and discuss whether it will cause problems to have different data 
models when sharing our data amongst ourselves and on Wikidata.

Simon Cobb

Marie Léger-St-Jean
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>

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