London
(England), 13 December 2011 -- A picture may be worth 1,000 words, but
permanently attached descriptions are worth a lot more as photos travel through
the digital world. A campaign has been launched now to embed descriptive and
rights information in digital media and to retain it during the whole life
cycle.
The
initiative has been launched by the International Press Telecommunications
Council (IPTC), the American Association of Advertising Agencies (4A’s), and
the Association of National Advertisers (ANA), with the support of trade
organisations representing visual arts and photo agencies. It aims to establish
the practice of applying descriptions and the copyright status of the content
as metadata, and to embed it permanently during the electronic exchange of
digital photo, text, audio or video files.
This
practice is based on the principles defined by the Embedded Metadata Manifesto
on the web site www.embeddedmetadata.org which invites organisations and individuals to
support the campaign.
The
campaign is designed for producers and users of digital media and the hardware
and software vendors who play a key role in enabling interoperability in data
exchange. The business benefits for both producers and users include efficient
delivery, successful retrieval, and improved rights management.
"Metadata
is an important driver for business productivity, so it should always be
retained.
Too much data is currently lost," said Michael Steidl, managing director
of the IPTC which created the Embedded Metadata Manifesto. "It is time for
content creators, distributors and software vendors to work together to bring
about conditions where business can make use of metadata to track and preserve
media files, copyright and other rights, as this is critical for the creative
industries that depend on that for their existence.”
“Embedding
descriptive information into commercial files, removes manual steps, and
duplication of effort, which can save time and money, and forms the foundation
for more efficient operations, measurement, and monetization of advertising
assets. These are the core reasons why the 4A’s and ANA partnered to create
Ad-ID, the United States standard for identifying Advertising assets across all
media platforms,” said Harold Geller, Senior Vice President Cross
Country-Industry Workflow for the 4A’s.
The five
key principles of the Embedded Metadata Manifesto are:
- Metadata is essential to describe, identify and track digital media and should be applied to all media items which are exchanged as files or by other means such as data streams.
- Media file formats should provide the means to embed metadata in ways that can be read and handled by different software systems.
- Metadata fields, their semantics (including labels on the user interface) and values, should not be changed across metadata formats.
- Copyright management information metadata must never be removed from the files.
- Other metadata should only be removed from files by agreement with their copyright holders.
About
the IPTC:
The IPTC,
based in London, is a consortium of the world's major news agencies, news
publishers and news industry vendors. It develops and maintains technical
standards for improved news exchange that are used by virtually every major
news organisation in the world. Its standards include the Photo Metadata standards
IPTC Core and Extension, the family of G2-Standards (NewsML-G2, EventsML-G2 and
SportsML-G2), NITF, rNews, and the IPTC NewsCodes. Visit the web site is www.iptc.org or follow @IPTC on Twitter.
About
the 4A’s:
The 4A’s
(American Association of Advertising Agencies) is the national trade
association of the advertising agency business and provides leadership,
advocacy and guidance to the industry. The management-oriented association
founded in 1917 helps its members build their businesses, and acts as the
industry’s spokesperson with government, media, and the public sector. Its
membership comprises virtually all of the large, multinational agencies and
hundreds of small and mid-sized agencies across the country. More than 1,200
member agency offices served by the 4A’s employ 65,000 people, offer a wide
range of marketing communications services, and place 80 percent of all
national advertising. For more information, visit www.aaaa.org.
About
the ANA:
Founded in
1910, the ANA (Association of National Advertisers) leads the marketing
community by providing its members with insights, collaboration, and advocacy.
ANA's membership includes 400 companies with 10,000 brands that collectively
spend over $250 billion in marketing communications and advertising. The ANA
strives to communicate marketing best practices, lead industry initiatives,
influence industry practices, manage industry affairs, and advance, promote,
and protect all advertisers and marketers. For more information, visit www.ana.net, follow @ANAmarketers on Twitter,
join us on Facebook (www.facebook.com/ANA),
or visit our YouTube channel (www.youtube.com/user/ANAmarketers).
No comments:
Post a Comment