On Constructing Persistent Identifiers with Persistent Resolution Targets

2016-08-30 | conference paper. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

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​On Constructing Persistent Identifiers with Persistent Resolution Targets​
Wannenwetsch, O.   & Majchrzak, T. A.​ (2016)
pp. 1031​-1040. ​Federated Conference on Computer Science and Information Systems (FedCSIS)​, Gdansk, Poland. DOI: https://doi.org/10.15439/2016F87 

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Authors
Wannenwetsch, Oliver ; Majchrzak, Tim A.
Abstract
Persistent Identifiers (PID) are the foundation referencing digital assets in scientific publications, books, and digital repositories. In its realization, PIDs contain metadata and resolving targets in form of URLs that point to data sets located on the network. In contrast to PIDs, the target URLs are typically changing over time; thus, PIDs need continuous maintenance -- an effort that is increasing tremendously with the advancement of e-Science and the advent of the Internet-of-Things (IoT). Nowadays, billions of sensors and data sets are subject of PID assignment. This paper presents a new approach of embedding location independent targets into PIDs that allows the creation of maintenance-free PIDs using content-centric network technology and overlay networks. For proving the validity of the presented approach, the Handle PID System is used in conjunction with Magnet Link access information encoding, state-of-the-art decentralized data distribution with BitTorrent, and Named Data Networking (NDN) as location-independent data access technology for networks. Contrasting existing approaches, no green-field implementation of PID or major modifications of the Handle System is required to enable location-independent data dissemination with maintenance-free PIDs.
Issue Date
30-August-2016
Organization
Gesellschaft für wissenschaftliche Datenverarbeitung 
Conference
Federated Conference on Computer Science and Information Systems (FedCSIS)
ISBN
978-83-60810-90-3
Conference Place
Gdansk, Poland
Event start
2016-09-11
Event end
2016-09-14
ISSN
2300-5963
Language
English

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