Publishing a Knowledge Organization System as Linked Data: The Case of the Universal Decimal Classification
Aida Slavic, Ronald Siebes, Andrea Scharnhorst

TL;DR
This paper discusses the process and challenges of publishing the Universal Decimal Classification as Linked Data, emphasizing the importance of interdisciplinary collaboration and complex service design for open and licensed access.
Contribution
It presents a detailed case study of converting UDC into Linked Data, highlighting technical, legal, and collaborative aspects involved.
Findings
Successful publication of UDC as Linked Data demonstrates feasibility.
Complex service architecture needed for open and licensed access.
Interdisciplinary collaboration is crucial for effective implementation.
Abstract
Linked data (LD) technology is hailed as a long-awaited solution in web-based information exchange. Linked Open Data (LOD) bring this to another level by enabling meaningful linking of resources and creating a global, openly accessible knowledge graph. Our case is the Universal Decimal Classification (UDC) and the challenges for a KOS service provider to maintain an LD service. UDC was created during the period 1896--1904 to support systematic organization and information retrieval of a bibliography. When discussing UDC as LD we make a distinction between two types of UDC data or two provenances: UDC source data, and UDC codes as they appear in metadata. To serve the purpose of supplying semantics one has to front--end UDC LD with a service that can parse and interpret complex UDC strings. While the use of UDC is free the publishing and distributing of UDC data is protected by a…
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