I can not speak much on the Linked Open Data but I think the reason you see so 
much more Linked Data in Europe is that they have been working with RDF in 
research and development projects much longer then we have here in the US (i.e. 
European Linked Data research is much more mature than Linked Data research in 
the US).

If I may then expand into the Open Data issue. I think Europe was just 'at the 
right place at the right time'. When the Open Data movement took off (in the 
mid 2000s), Europeans saw this new emerging web based model (RDF) as a natural 
fit for publishing open data. Conversely in the US the Open data movement, lets 
say the Open Government Data movement (http://www.data.gov/) so we can point to 
a specific service, relied on older data formats and even worse sometimes 
proprietary formats (Excel spreadsheets for example) to publish the open data. 

I can not speak much on other US open data initiatives but but that is my 
opinion with regards to Linked Open Data in Europe vs the US (for what it is 
worth).

Thanks,

Jeff Mixter
Research Support Specialist
OCLC Research
614-761-5159
mixt...@oclc.org

________________________________________
From: Code for Libraries <CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU> on behalf of Debra Shapiro 
<dsshap...@wisc.edu>
Sent: Friday, December 19, 2014 10:18 AM
To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU
Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] linked data and open access

Yes, I absolutely agree Eric - I am not sure if it is because we have no 
National Library - it might just be because of the US notions of individuality 
and freedom of commerce - as a country, we just won't tell anyone what to do, 
even if it’s to be open.

LIBER open data agreement: 
http://libereurope.eu/libers-open-access-publication-guidelines/

Sir Tim, Open Data Institute in Britain: http://theodi.org/team/timbl ; 
http://theodi.org/

EU/EC Neelie Kroes, open data - 
http://ec.europa.eu/commission_2010-2014/kroes/en/tags/data

My 2 cents and worth every penny -
deb


On Dec 19, 2014, at 8:48 AM, Eric Lease Morgan <emor...@nd.edu> wrote:

> I don’t know about y’all, but it seems to me that things like linked data and 
> open access are larger trends in Europe than here in the United States. Is 
> there are larger commitment to sharing in Europe when compared to the United 
> States? If so, is this a factor based on the nonexistence of a national 
> library in the United States? Is this your perception too? —Eric Morgan

dsshap...@wisc.edu
Debra Shapiro
SLIS, the iSchool at UW-Madison
Helen C. White Hall, Rm. 4282
600 N. Park St.
Madison WI 53706
608 262 9195
mobile 608 712 6368
FAX 608 263 4849

Reply via email to