Galleries, libraries, archives, and museums (GLAMs) today are facing fewer barriers to uploading their content onto Wikimedia projects now that the new GLAM-Wiki Toolset Project has been launched. The tool, which is the fruit of a collaboration between Europeana—the Internet portal providing access to millions of digitized files from all over Europe—and several Wikimedia chapters, relieves GLAMs from having to write their own automated scripts and gives them a standardized method of uploading large amounts of their digitized holdings.
Despite the large amount of work involved, Commons has a long history of partnering with outside institutions for media donations. The largest include the Dutch Rijksdienst voor het Cultureel Erfgoed, the US National Archives, and the first mass image donation, Germany's Bundesarchiv.
In an email to the Signpost, Europeana's relatively new GLAM-Wiki coordinator Liam Wyatt noted that "the current system", which forces these GLAMs to write customized scripts or find a rare editor willing to do all of the work for them, "is not sustainable." The toolset, "for the first time", changes that dynamic, allowing "the reasonably-technically competent and motivated GLAM to share large amounts of multimedia to Commons ... this is a giant leap forward in giving GLAMs the ability to share with Commons on their own terms."
They will still need editors to donate their time to facilitate these partnerships, as someone needs to explain the value of Wikimedia projects and overcome objections. Still, as Wyatt says, both sides will no longer have to "spend considerable time managing the technical side of uploads ... all built by themselves by hand."
On the GLAM side, there is a fairly large amount of work that needs to be done prior to uploading any images, most of which revolves around the media's metadata. While a simple concept, it is exceedingly complex in practice; as a previous Signpost op-ed noted, "there will be no single unifying metadata 'standard' ... biosharing.org lists just under 200 metadata standards for experimental biosciences alone. ... any solution to handling digital objects must have a mechanism for handling a multiplicity of standards, and ideally within an individual object". Between that and the MediaWiki software, which does not natively come with simple methods of uploading metadata, much of the toolset's multiyear development was spent on this problem.
Wyatt told us that the tool's overall impact will be to make Commons more palatable to GLAM managers who are deciding between Commons and its chief competitors, Flickr and Google Art Project. "If you're a busy GLAM multimedia manager, both of those platforms are significantly more user friendly in their upload usability to a non-technical person", Wyatt says.
"We can talk about the value of free knowledge and the massive visibility that Wikipedia provides until the cows come home, but if we can't enable those GLAMs that do want to share their content with us to do it by themselves, with their own metadata, at their own pace... then we are placing ourselves at a significant disadvantage."
While still in its infancy, the toolset has already allowed Fæ, a London-based Wikimedian and former trustee of Wikimedia UK, to upload hundreds of thousands of images from the New York Public Library, Library of Congress, Rijksmuseum, and historical American Buildings Survey. The Nederlands Instituut voor Beeld en Geluid (Dutch Institute for Sound and Vision), the first GLAM to use the tool, uploaded 500 videos of Dutch birds (cf. press release).
Four Wikimedia chapters (Netherlands, UK, France, and Switzerland) provided funding for the project, which Europeana has spent four years developing. It was first announced in 2011.
The toolset's software developer, Dan Entous, told us that the toolset:
“ | ... uses a flat xml file, containing metadata related to all of the items you intend to upload to commons, and a step-by-step process of mapping that metadata to a mediawiki template on commons. The mediawiki template will display a thumbnail or medium size representation of the digital file and a table of mapped metadata. The initial step-by-step process walks you through setting up the batch upload process, and once you are satisfied with the results (after having tested the process on Commons beta), will run a background process on Commons that will upload all of the items listed in the metadata file.
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Galleries, libraries, archives, and museums (GLAMs) today are facing fewer barriers to uploading their content onto Wikimedia projects now that the new GLAM-Wiki Toolset Project has been launched. The tool, which is the fruit of a collaboration between Europeana—the Internet portal providing access to millions of digitized files from all over Europe—and several Wikimedia chapters, relieves GLAMs from having to write their own automated scripts and gives them a standardized method of uploading large amounts of their digitized holdings.
Despite the large amount of work involved, Commons has a long history of partnering with outside institutions for media donations. The largest include the Dutch Rijksdienst voor het Cultureel Erfgoed, the US National Archives, and the first mass image donation, Germany's Bundesarchiv.
In an email to the Signpost, Europeana's relatively new GLAM-Wiki coordinator Liam Wyatt noted that "the current system", which forces these GLAMs to write customized scripts or find a rare editor willing to do all of the work for them, "is not sustainable." The toolset, "for the first time", changes that dynamic, allowing "the reasonably-technically competent and motivated GLAM to share large amounts of multimedia to Commons ... this is a giant leap forward in giving GLAMs the ability to share with Commons on their own terms."
They will still need editors to donate their time to facilitate these partnerships, as someone needs to explain the value of Wikimedia projects and overcome objections. Still, as Wyatt says, both sides will no longer have to "spend considerable time managing the technical side of uploads ... all built by themselves by hand."
On the GLAM side, there is a fairly large amount of work that needs to be done prior to uploading any images, most of which revolves around the media's metadata. While a simple concept, it is exceedingly complex in practice; as a previous Signpost op-ed noted, "there will be no single unifying metadata 'standard' ... biosharing.org lists just under 200 metadata standards for experimental biosciences alone. ... any solution to handling digital objects must have a mechanism for handling a multiplicity of standards, and ideally within an individual object". Between that and the MediaWiki software, which does not natively come with simple methods of uploading metadata, much of the toolset's multiyear development was spent on this problem.
Wyatt told us that the tool's overall impact will be to make Commons more palatable to GLAM managers who are deciding between Commons and its chief competitors, Flickr and Google Art Project. "If you're a busy GLAM multimedia manager, both of those platforms are significantly more user friendly in their upload usability to a non-technical person", Wyatt says.
"We can talk about the value of free knowledge and the massive visibility that Wikipedia provides until the cows come home, but if we can't enable those GLAMs that do want to share their content with us to do it by themselves, with their own metadata, at their own pace... then we are placing ourselves at a significant disadvantage."
While still in its infancy, the toolset has already allowed Fæ, a London-based Wikimedian and former trustee of Wikimedia UK, to upload hundreds of thousands of images from the New York Public Library, Library of Congress, Rijksmuseum, and historical American Buildings Survey. The Nederlands Instituut voor Beeld en Geluid (Dutch Institute for Sound and Vision), the first GLAM to use the tool, uploaded 500 videos of Dutch birds (cf. press release).
Four Wikimedia chapters (Netherlands, UK, France, and Switzerland) provided funding for the project, which Europeana has spent four years developing. It was first announced in 2011.
The toolset's software developer, Dan Entous, told us that the toolset:
“ | ... uses a flat xml file, containing metadata related to all of the items you intend to upload to commons, and a step-by-step process of mapping that metadata to a mediawiki template on commons. The mediawiki template will display a thumbnail or medium size representation of the digital file and a table of mapped metadata. The initial step-by-step process walks you through setting up the batch upload process, and once you are satisfied with the results (after having tested the process on Commons beta), will run a background process on Commons that will upload all of the items listed in the metadata file.
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Discuss this story
The Content translation tool hasn't been deployed to any Wikipedias. It's still only deployed to beta labs. Note the "beta.wmflabs.org" in the urls in the blog post. Legoktm ( talk) 05:44, 26 July 2014 (UTC) reply
New Yorker archive
I love the New Yorker, but I guess the summer-long "free-for-all" is not so free for all, because I just tried to access the open archive and got stuck at a pay wall here. Jane ( talk) 06:42, 26 July 2014 (UTC) reply
My understanding is some articles are still randomly blocked behind a pay-wall; and they may also have a limit to how many can be viewed per day or month (like the NYT method). -- Green C 22:34, 27 July 2014 (UTC) I got an answer from the ticket I opened, and here it is: "Thank you for your inquiry regarding the Archives. The Archives is still a subscriber based benefit, which has access to issues as far back as 1925. Access to our website is what is free at the moment. The website is updated daily with new articles, information, blogs, cartoons, etc. The Article you are referring to is one that is speaking about the Author only. " So no free archive access (bummer), but access to the website, which is still nice I suppose. 20:56, 30 July 2014 (UTC) reply
Tag missing
File:"Konig Albert," Promenade Deck, North German Lloyd, Royal Mail Steamers"-LCCN2002720829.jpg, presented at the top, appears to lack a German PD tag, btw. Hchc2009 ( talk) 14:18, 26 July 2014 (UTC) reply
ArbCom Media Viewer case
Although there is less than one day left to comment on the evidence page, and less than a week left for any public participation in the workshop page, there have already been calls to desyssop User:Eloquence. The opening salvo was fired by Dennis Brown, who states, "This has a demoralizing effect on the admin corps, knowing we are one hissy fit away from being desysopped by a disgruntled employee." — Neotarf ( talk) 15:45, 26 July 2014 (UTC) reply
GLAM Wiki Toolset demo at Wikimania 2014 in London
For anyone going to the Wikimania conference in London 6-10 August, at wm2014:Submissions/Using the Mass upload tool to copy GLAM collections to Commons there will be a presentation Sunday 11:30 – 12:00 on the toolset. Blue Rasberry (talk) 14:46, 28 July 2014 (UTC) reply