Table of Contents

Appendix III: Existing Work

Legal and licensing standards

Comment Icon0 The Open Knowledge Definition (OKD) sets out principles to define the ‘open’ in open knowledge. The term knowledge is used broadly and it includes all forms of data, content such as music, films or books as well any other type of information.

Comment Icon0 In the simplest form the definition can be summed up in the statement that “A piece of knowledge is open if you are free to use, reuse, and redistribute it”.

Comment Icon0 For full details see:

Format standards

Comment Icon0 There are a plethora of definitions of what an ‘open standard’ is – from the legal definitions of international standards organisations and national governments to definitions from companies, NGOs and influential technologists.

Comment Icon0 For further information see:

Comment Icon0 A list of file formats, including information on which are machine readable, is available at:

Comment Icon0 For web publishing standards, see the World Wide Web Consortium:

Data and metadata standards

Resource description

Data models

Comment Icon0 There are also a range of standards for publishing different kinds of data, including:

Other relevant work

Appendix III: Existing Work

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