Overview of content related to 'machine-readable data'
This page provides an overview of 1 article related to 'machine-readable data'. Note that filters may be applied to display a sub-set of articles in this category (see FAQs on filtering for usage tips). Select this link to remove all filters.

Machine-readable data is data (or metadata) which is in a format that can be understood by a computer. There are two types; human-readable data that is marked up so that it can also be read by machines (examples; microformats, RDFa) or data file formats intended principally for machines (RDF, XML, JSON). (Excerpt from Wikipedia article: Machine-readable data)
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| Title | Article summary | Date |
|---|---|---|
Copyright Issues in Projects Funded by the Electronic Libraries Programme |
After several months experience of dealing with copyright and the eLib programme, Charles Oppenheim returns to the major issues that have a risen. |
January 1997, issue7, regular column |