Images of a bi-lingual catalog - Republicanese and Democratese.

-----Original Message-----
From: Code for Libraries [mailto:CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU] On Behalf Of Galen 
Charlton
Sent: Monday, April 18, 2016 11:00 AM
To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU
Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] "Illegal Aliens" subject heading

Hi,

On Mon, Apr 18, 2016 at 10:28 AM, Eric Hellman <e...@hellman.net> wrote:
> I also think that Code4Lib is potentially more powerful than congress 
> in this situation. LC says that "all of the revisions will appear on a 
> Tentative List and be approved no earlier than May 2016; the revision 
> of existing bibliographic records will commence shortly thereafter." 
> It seems unlikely that Congress can act before this happens. We could 
> then implement systems that effect this subject heading deprecation 
> without regard to Rep. Diane Black and Congress. We can scrub the MARC 
> records. We can alter the cataloguing interfaces. We could tweak the 
> cataloguing standard.

Or to put it another way, "we" could make a (hopefully friendly) fork of LCSH 
if it gets compromised via an act of law.

Such a fork could provide benefits going far beyond protesting Congressional 
interference in LCSH:

* If appropriate tools for collaboration are built, it could allow updates to 
be made faster than what the current SACO process permits, while still 
benefiting from the careful work of LC subject experts.
* It could provide infrastructure for easily creating additional forks of the 
vocabulary, for cases where LCSH is a decent starting point but needs 
refinement for a particular collection of things to be described.

However, I put "we" in quotes because such an undertaking could not succeed 
simply by throwing code at the problem. There are many Code4Lib folks who could 
munge authority records, build tools for collaborative thesaurus maintenance, 
stand up SPARQL endpoints and feeds of headings changes and so forth — but 
unless that fork provides infrastructure that catalogers and metadataists 
/want/ to use and has some guarantee of sticking around, the end result would 
be nothing more than fodder for a C4L Journal article or two.

> What else would we need?

Involvement of folks who might use and contribute to such a fork from the 
get-go, and early thought to how such a fork can be sustained. I think we 
already have the technology, for the most part; the question is whether we have 
the people.

Regards,

Galen
--
Galen Charlton
Infrastructure and Added Services Manager Equinox Software, Inc. / Open Your 
Library
email:  g...@esilibrary.com
direct: +1 770-709-5581
cell:   +1 404-984-4366
skype:  gmcharlt
web:    http://www.esilibrary.com/
Supporting Koha and Evergreen: http://koha-community.org & 
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