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MIT OpenCourseWare requires persistent, unique, unambiguous names for its Contributors, Courses, Sections, and Resources. It refers to these names as identifiers. This document clarifies the MIT OpenCourseWare strategy for identifier assignment and use.
Identifier Requirements
Identifiers are used by MIT OpenCourseWare to reference certain objects (Contributors, Courses, Sections, and Resources) within its publication environment. MIT OpenCourseWare also shares these identifiers with consumers and adapters of its content, creating a stable, commonly used set of references. In order to serve these purposes, MIT OpenCourseWare identifiers must meet the following requirements:
- Once assigned to an object an identifier should not change.
- Two objects should not share the same identifier.
- The identifier should allow for the clear
Identifier Usage
- enable interaction with the object or its metadata.
- The identifier should be appropriate for internet-distributed, digital objects.
- The identifier should support use and adaptation of the object
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- outside of MIT OpenCourseWare publications.
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Don't Share Names
- Names are not Titles
Course, Section, and Resource Titles are not unique. - Names are not Personal Names
Personal N
These requirements recommend the use of URIs (http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3986) as identifiers for MIT OpenCourseWare Contributors, Courses, Sections, and Resources.
Uniform Resource Identifiers (URIs)
URIs
URIs are names not locators
URIs are globally unique
URIs are a web technology
URIs are crucial to linked data principles, which we should follow
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Linked Data Principles
See: http://www.w3.org/DesignIssues/LinkedData.html
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We currently make XML metadata files for Courses, Sections, and some Resources available to the public. For example, see (http://ocw.mit.edu/OcwWeb/Electrical-Engineering-and-Computer-Science/6-005Fall-2008/))
Identifier Usage
MIT OpenCourseWare assigns identifiers for use within its own publications. These identifiers may be used by individuals, organizations, or projects external to MIT OpenCourseWare. MIT OpenCourseWare does not assume responsibility for supporting these externals uses, or for establishing or maintaining identifiers for any objects outside of MIT OpenCourseWare publications. For example, MIT OpenCourseWare will establish identifiers for its Contributors, many of which are MIT Faculty. This does not mean that MIT OpenCourseWare maintains identifiers on behalf of the Institute for every MIT faculty or community member.