Library of Congress and Web 2.0

Library of Congress Flickr imageThe Library of Congress is now using Flickr, and Flickr’s new commons area, to load images for collaborative tagging. This is wonderful because the Library of Congress has built so much core infrastructure using hierarchical definitions and adding Web 2.0-style folksonomy information to that is exactly what the Semantic Web (sometimes called Web 3.0) is all about.
The Library of Congress has a Prints and Photographs Online Catalog (with more than 1 million images and growing) that have been available online for over 10 years and now they are also selling some of their materials via print-on-demand. Because the Library of Congress is so important to the history of libraries and information architectures, any new project they get involved with matters a great deal to the content of that project and to all related systems of information. While it could seem that this is “just another” site testing Web 2.0 tools, the Library of Congress has defined so much of the commons and information sharing that even their frivolities are important.

1 Comment

  1. Since the Library of Congress is using Flickr, we’ll try it too! Our Flickr account is http://www.flickr.com/photos/ufdc/ and we’ll keep adding pictures and testing it until we make a decision. It is very nice that users can choose an alias, and that UFDC was available so that we could use it.

Comments are closed.