1. Geoffrey Bilder
Director of Strategic Initiatives
CrossRef Workshops Nov. 15th, 2010
CrossMark
Sneak Peek
Monday, 15 November 2010
2. “The Web is by nature an interactive environment,
yet online journals are mostly static, befitting their
traditional role as a never-changing scholarly
record.”
Monday, 15 November 2010
18. Elevator Pitch
• A logo that identifies a publisher-certified
version of record.
Monday, 15 November 2010
19. Elevator Pitch
• A logo that identifies a publisher-certified
version of record.
• Clicking the logo tells you:
• If the copy is publisher-maintained and
whether there have been any corrections.
• Where the publisher-maintained version is.
• Other metadata the publisher chooses to
include.
Monday, 15 November 2010
37. • Create a“CrossMark Policy”page & assign
a DOI to it.
• Provide CrossMark metadata in your
CrossRef deposits.
• Record DOI in HTML metadata.
• Apply the CrossMark Widget to HTML.
• Apply CrossMark metadata to PDFs.
• Apply the linked CrossMark logo to PDFs.
Monday, 15 November 2010
39. CrossMark Policy
Page
• Commitment to maintain version of record.
• Policy on corrections, retractions, withdrawls
and other updates.
• Definitions and explanations of custom
metadata fields.
• Links to other relevant policies.
Monday, 15 November 2010
58. HTML Widget FAQ
Q: What happens if the user has javascript disabled?
Q: How big is the CrossMark javascript?
A: ~ 60 lines ~ 1.31KB or ~ 619 bytes gzipped
Q: Will widget load reliably?
Q: What browsers does it work with?
A: Follows principle of“progressive enhancement.”
Dialog displayed in normal window.*
NB ~ 1% of browsers turn-off javascript. http://yhoo.it/bjd6XC
A: We’ve minimised size, maximised cache-ability and
can switch-on CDN if we need to.
A: All browsers supported by jquery.
Monday, 15 November 2010
82. How can we determine whether we can trust the material emanating
from a site? The Web was originally conceived as a tool for
researchers who trusted one another implicitly; strong models of
security were not built in.We have been living with the
consequences ever since.As a result, substantial research should be
devoted to engineering layers of trust and provenance into Web
interactions. ..." !
Monday, 15 November 2010
83. How can we determine whether we can trust the material emanating
from a site? The Web was originally conceived as a tool for
researchers who trusted one another implicitly; strong models of
security were not built in.We have been living with the
consequences ever since.As a result, substantial research should be
devoted to engineering layers of trust and provenance into Web
interactions. ..." !
Sir Tim told BBC News that there needed to be new
systems that would give websites a label for
trustworthiness once they had been proved reliable
sources…So I'd be interested in different organisations
labeling websites in different ways.
Monday, 15 November 2010
85. Sir Tim told BBC News that there needed to be new
systems that would give websites a label for
trustworthiness once they had been proved reliable
sources…So I'd be interested in different organisations
labeling websites in different ways.
Monday, 15 November 2010