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- The Arts: Sharing Center Stage on the Internet BOF (ARTS)
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- Reported by Scott Stoner/The Kennedy Center
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- Session Focus
-
- Scott Stoner and Susan Siegfried welcomed participants, outlined the
- agenda, and asked each person to introduce themselves and their interest
- in the arts on the Internet. The meeting agenda focused on determining
- the extent of interest and needs that would support a proposal to create
- an IETF working group on the arts and humanities. Participants received
- a draft of possible working group goals that were identified during the
- previous arts BOF.
-
- Participants were asked to introduce themselves and indicate their
- interest in attending the BOF, the results of which demonstrated
- interests ranging from the challenges of capturing and cataloguing
- non-textual information to opportunities for using the Internet as a
- tool for creating and appreciating the arts and humanities. The session
- attracted a number of participants who had heard the ARTS BOF had been
- one of the most stimulating sessions at the last IETF meeting in
- Toronto.
-
- Susan Siegfried summarized two recent national reports (also distributed
- to BOF participants) that directly address many of the issues identified
- by participants during their introductions and at the previous BOF
- session. The reports are: ``Arts, Humanities, and Culture on the
- NII,'' report of the Information Infrastructure Task Force Committee on
- Applications and Technology, NIST, U.S. Department of Commerce and
- ``Humanities and Arts on the Information Highways,'' report developed by
- The Getty Art History Information Program, The American Council of
- Learned Societies, and The Coalition for Networked Information (the
- reports were also made available to IETF participants at the
- distribution table near the IETF registration desk.)
-
-
- Discussion
-
- Stoner initiated discussion by asking participants to consider the
- appropriateness of the goals identified during the previous BOF session.
- There was much discussion regarding the general need for a clearinghouse
- that would assist Internet users in finding and/or cataloguing arts and
- humanities information. As a result of this discussion, participants
- agreed that the IETF could be helpful in defining a methodology, tools
- and guidelines for the establishment of an effective clearinghouse (or
- multiple clearinghouses with similar functions) on the Internet.
-
- The clearinghouse discussion also led participants to defining a mission
- for the proposed arts and humanities working group as follows: to
- promote the infrastructure for locating, creating and presenting arts
- and humanities content on the Internet. In conjunction with defining
- the mission for the potential working group, Joyce Reynolds was asked to
- clarify how this would fit within the User Services area of IETF. She
- responded that User Services supports a forum to produce useful
- documents ``from novice to knowledgeable'' that helps users to more
- effectively access and apply information and services on the Internet.
- Participants then affirmed that the proposed arts and humanities mission
- statement represented an important need in the field and that IETF
- members could be of valuable assistance in defining and helping to meet
- the goals that would achieve said mission.
-
- In order to further define the proposed working group goals,
- participants identified the audience for arts and humanities
- information. There was considerable agreement that the audience is
- divided between producers and consumers of arts and humanities in
- formation and resources, whether individuals, institutions, or
- organizations. For example, cultural institutions like museums produce
- information that requires guidelines for archiving and cataloguing
- information that is unlike that in traditional library systems.
- Likewise, visual and performing arts institutions have performance-based
- works of art and resources that will require specific protocols for
- electronic storage and retrieval.
-
- Much discussion focused on the ``gap'' between the non-technical arts
- and humanities community and the emerging worldwide on-line userbase.
- Participants identified that a priority goal should be the development
- of a resource that would serve as a basic guide for the arts and
- humanities community to effectively understand and use the Internet.
- This should include a FAQ for the arts community that in fact represents
- the existing ``gap'' of knowledge (and resistance) regarding the
- information highway.
-
- As the session drew to a close, participants identified the following as
- first priority goals for the proposed working group (acknowledging that
- other goals will surely emerge or become more clear as the group begins
- its work):
-
-
- 1. Develop a guide for the arts and humanities community that will
- help individuals, institutions, and organizations to successfully
- access and use the Internet
-
- 2. Assist the arts and humanities to use the Internet as a tool and
- resource for developing a knowledge base of research and
- information that is not currently widely accessible electronically
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- 3. Assist with the development of innovative templates and technical
- tools for the coordination of scheduling and programming
- information (e.g. performances, exhibitions)
-
- 4. Define technical needs and requirements that are necessary for
- networking all major arts and humanities constituencies on the
- Internet
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-
- Outcomes
-
- Following the above discussion, there was consensus that a proposal
- should be prepared and submitted to the IESG to establish an Arts and
- Humanities Working Group. Stoner and Siegfried will develop a draft
- proposal for review and approval by Reynolds (to be completed by the end
- of February) and Reynolds will present the proposal to the IESG prior to
- the next IETF meeting in April, 1995. The draft will also be circulated
- via the arts mailing list for review and comment by BOF participants
- prior to submission to the IESG.
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-