IETF URNbis WG M. Huttunen Internet-Draft J. Hakala Obsoletes: 2288,3187 (if approved) The National Library of Finland Intended status: Standards Track A. Hoenes, Ed. Expires: August 19, 2012 TR-Sys February 16, 2012 Using International Standard Book Numbers as Uniform Resource Names draft-ietf-urnbis-rfc3187bis-isbn-urn-02 Abstract The International Standard Book Number, ISBN, is a widely used identifier for monographic publications. Since 2001, the URN (Uniform Resource Name) namespace "ISBN" has been reserved for ISBNs. The namespace registration was performed in RFC 3187 and applied only to the ISBN as specified in the ISO Standard 2108-1992, now known as "ISBN-10". To allow for further growth in use, the successor ISO Standard, ISO 2108:2005, has defined an expanded format for the ISBN, known as "ISBN-13". This document defines how both of these ISBN standard versions can be supported within the URN framework. Moreover, additional syntax related information required by RFC 2141[bis] has been included. An updated namespace registration is provided. It describes how both the old and the new ISBN format can share the same namespace. This document replaces RFC 3187; it also obsoletes and moves to Historic status the predecessor thereof, RFC 2288. Discussion This draft is based on individual work started in 2008. When the URNBIS working group was launched, revision of the ISBN namespace registration was included in its charter. Comments are welcome and should be directed to the urn@ietf.org mailing list or the authors. Status of This Memo This Internet-Draft is submitted in full conformance with the provisions of BCP 78 and BCP 79. Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF). Note that other groups may also distribute working documents as Internet-Drafts. The list of current Internet- Drafts is at http://datatracker.ietf.org/drafts/current/. Huttunen, et al. Expires August 19, 2012 [Page 1] Internet-Draft ISBN URN Namespace February 2012 Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents at any time. It is inappropriate to use Internet-Drafts as reference material or to cite them other than as "work in progress." This Internet-Draft will expire on August 19, 2012. Copyright Notice Copyright (c) 2012 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the document authors. All rights reserved. This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal Provisions Relating to IETF Documents (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of publication of this document. Please review these documents carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect to this document. Code Components extracted from this document must include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as described in the Simplified BSD License. This document may contain material from IETF Documents or IETF Contributions published or made publicly available before November 10, 2008. The person(s) controlling the copyright in some of this material may not have granted the IETF Trust the right to allow modifications of such material outside the IETF Standards Process. Without obtaining an adequate license from the person(s) controlling the copyright in such materials, this document may not be modified outside the IETF Standards Process, and derivative works of it may not be created outside the IETF Standards Process, except to format it for publication as an RFC or to translate it into languages other than English. Huttunen, et al. Expires August 19, 2012 [Page 2] Internet-Draft ISBN URN Namespace February 2012 Table of Contents 1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 2. Conventions used in this document . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 3. Fundamental Namespace and Community Considerations . . . . . . 5 3.1. The URN:ISBN Namespace . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 3.2. Community Considerations for ISBNs . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 4. International Standard Book Numbers . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 4.1. Overview / Namespace Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . 6 4.1.1. ISBN-10 Structure . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 4.1.2. ISBN-13 Structure . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 4.1.3. Relation between ISBN-10 and ISBN-13 . . . . . . . . . 7 4.2. Encoding Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 4.3. Resolution of ISBN-based URNs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 4.3.1. General . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 4.3.2. Practical Aspects . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 4.4. Additional Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 5. URN Namespace Registration and Use . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 5.1. URN Namespace ID Registration for the International Standard Book Number (ISBN) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 6. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17 7. IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17 8. Acknowledgements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17 9. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 9.1. Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 9.2. Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19 Appendix A. Draft Change Log . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 A.1. draft-hakala-rfc3187bis-isbn-urn-00 to draft-ietf-urnbis-*-00 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 A.2. draft-ietf-urnbis-rfc3187bis-isbn-urn-00 to -01 . . . . . 20 A.3. draft-ietf-urnbis-rfc3187bis-isbn-urn-01 to -02 . . . . . 20 Huttunen, et al. Expires August 19, 2012 [Page 3] Internet-Draft ISBN URN Namespace February 2012 1. Introduction One of the basic permanent URI schemes (cf. RFC 3986 [RFC3986], [IANA-URI]) is 'URN' (Uniform Resource Name) as originally defined in RFC 2141 [RFC2141] and now being formally specified in RFC 2141bis [I-D.ietf-urnbis-rfc2141bis-urn]. Any identifier, when used within the URN system, needs its own namespace. In February 2012, there were 45 registered URN namespaces (see [IANA-URN]), one of which belongs to ISBN, International Standard Book Number, as specified 2001 in RFC 3187 [RFC3187]. Since 2007, there have been two variants of ISBN in use; an outdated one based on ISO 2108-1992 [ISO1] and a new one defined in ISO 2108- 2005 [ISO2]. These versions shall subsequently be called "ISBN-10" and "ISBN-13", respectively, in this document. If what is said in this document applies to both ISBN versions, the generic term "ISBN" is used. As part of the validation process for the development of URNs, the IETF URN working group agreed that it is important to demonstrate that a URN syntax proposal can accommodate existing identifiers from well established namespaces. One such infrastructure for assigning and managing names comes from the bibliographic community. Bibliographic identifiers function as names for objects that exist both in print and, increasingly, in electronic formats. RFC 2288 [RFC2288] investigated the feasibility of using three identifiers (ISBN, ISSN, and SICI -- see below) as URNs, with positive results; however, it did not formally register corresponding URN namespaces. This was in part due to the still evolving process to formalize criteria for namespace definition documents and registration, consolidated later in the IETF into RFC 3406 [RFC3406]. That RFC, in turn, is now being updated as well into RFC 3406bis [I-D.ietf-urnbis-rfc3406bis-urn-ns-reg]. URN Namespaces have subsequently been registered for both ISBN (International Standard Book Number) and ISSN (International Serial Standard Number) in RFCs 3187 [RFC3187] and 3044 [RFC3044], respectively, but not for SICI (Serial Item and Contribution Identifier), mainly due to the identifier's limited popularity. Moreover, the URN resolution process for SICIs would be complicated. Guidelines for using ISBN-10s (based on ISO 2108:1992) as URNs and the original namespace registration have been published in RFC 3187 [RFC3187]. The RFC at hand replaces RFC 3187; sections related to ISBN-13 have been added, all ISBN-10 information has been updated and the namespace registration revised to make it compliant with both ISBN versions and stipulations of RFC 3406bis [I-D.ietf-urnbis-rfc3406bis-urn-ns-reg], the work-in-progress Huttunen, et al. Expires August 19, 2012 [Page 4] Internet-Draft ISBN URN Namespace February 2012 successor of RFC 3406 [RFC3406], which in turn had replaced the legacy RFC 2611 [RFC2611] applied in the initial registration. 2. Conventions used in this document The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in RFC 2119 [RFC2119]. "ISBN-10" refers to the original, 10-digit ISBN scheme specified in ISO 2108-1992 [ISO1]. "ISBN-13" refers to the current, 13-digit ISBN scheme specified in ISO 2108-2005 [ISO2]. "URN:ISBN" is used as a shorthand for "ISBN-based URN". 3. Fundamental Namespace and Community Considerations 3.1. The URN:ISBN Namespace ISBN is a well established standard identifier system for monographic publications. Therefore, any useful and deployable method for identifying these entities for Internet-wide reference and making their metadata available on the Internet needs to be based on ISBNs. 3.2. Community Considerations for ISBNs ISBNs are assigned under the auspices of the International ISBN Agency [ISBNORG] and national/regional ISBN agencies. ISBN assignment is a well managed and understood process, but as in any process administered by humans, errors do take place. If so, there are procedures in place for fixing the incorrect ISBNs. Books are finite objects, which may consist of component parts such as chapters or short stories / novellas. Such component parts may be given their own ISBNs if and only if they are available separately. The ISBN standard does not allow augmentation of the ISBN of the book with (URI) fragments for identification of the book's physical component parts. If a fragment identifier is added to an ISBN, the resulting namespace specific string will not be an ISBN; it could be another identifier such as a national bibliography number (NBN). In late 90s there was an attempt to develop BICI (Book Item and Contribution Identifier), but the standard was neither completed nor implemented. BICIs would have been based on ISBNs, and the idea was to generate them programmatically for e-books containing structured metadata. The applications needed for this failed to materialize. Huttunen, et al. Expires August 19, 2012 [Page 5] Internet-Draft ISBN URN Namespace February 2012 The materials identified by an ISBN may exist only in printed or other physical form, not electronically. And even if an electronic book exists, access rights may be limited. ISBN-based URN resolution services are expected to support a wide variety of information services related to books. Hence, when the identified manifestation of the book cannot be supplied, the applicable URN:ISBN resolver SHOULD supply descriptive and rights metadata about the relevant manifestation; the resolver MAY also provide links to other manifestations of the same work, or to related works. National libraries are among the key organizations providing URN resolution services for books. Many of them are currently digitizing their historical printed books collections. As a rule, a digitized book does not get an ISBN, especially if the original printed book did not have one. Instead, national bibliography numbers are often used for identification. In such cases, the applicable resolver MAY resolve the ISBN of the printed original by pointing to the digital copy. For library users and Internet-based supply chain management for the delivery of monographs, URN:ISBN-based identification and resolution services offer efficient, reliable and persistent access to resources and/or resource-related services. The users will not need special tools for this; Web browsers are sufficient. The next section presents an overview of the application of the URN: ISBN namespace and the principles, and systems used, for the resolution of ISBN-based URNs. 4. International Standard Book Numbers 4.1. Overview / Namespace Considerations An International Standard Book Number (ISBN) identifies a product form or edition of a monographic publication. ISO 2108 requires that each product form (e.g. hardcover, paperback, PDF) has its own ISBN. 4.1.1. ISBN-10 Structure The ISBN-10 is defined by the ISO Standard 2108-1992 [ISO1]. It is a ten-digit number (the last "digit" can be the letter "X" as well) that is divided into four variable-length parts usually separated by hyphens when printed. Note that these hyphens can be removed; ISBNs with and without the hyphens are lexically equivalent. The parts are as follows (in this order): o a group identifier that specifies a group of publishers, based on national scope, geographic scope, or some other criteria; Huttunen, et al. Expires August 19, 2012 [Page 6] Internet-Draft ISBN URN Namespace February 2012 o the publisher identifier; o the title identifier; and o a modulo 11 check digit, using X instead of 10; the details of the calculation are specified in the ISO Standard [ISO1]. ISBN-10s were assigned starting from the 1970s until the introduction of ISBN-13 in January 2007. 4.1.2. ISBN-13 Structure ISBN-13 is defined by the ISO Standard 2108-2005 [ISO2]. The ISBN-13 is a thirteen-digit number that is divided into five parts usually separated by hyphens when printed. The first and the last part have a fixed lenght, but the other parts have variable length. These parts are as follows (in this order): o an ISBN-13 prefix element -- a 3-digit prefix specified by the International ISBN Agency; at the time of this writing, applicable values were 978 and 979; future versions of the standard may define additional values; o a registration group element that specifies the registration group; it identifies the national, geographic, language, or other such grouping within which one or more ISBN Agencies operate; o the registrant element; o the publication element; and o a modulo 10 check digit; the details of the calculation are specified in the ISO Standard [ISO2]. 4.1.3. Relation between ISBN-10 and ISBN-13 The structural differences between the ISBN-10 and ISBN-13 are the prefix element (which does not exist in the ISBN-10) and the check digit calculation algorithm, which is modulo 11 in ISBN-10 and modulo 10 in ISBN-13. Further, the terminology in ISBN-10 differs substantially from the terminology applied in ISBN-13. In this document, ISBN-13 terminology shall be used from now on; for a reader used to ISBN-10 terminology, the following mapping may be useful: o ISBN-10 group identifier <-> ISBN-13 registration group element under prefix 978; Huttunen, et al. Expires August 19, 2012 [Page 7] Internet-Draft ISBN URN Namespace February 2012 o ISBN-10 publisher identifier <-> ISBN-13 registrant element; o ISBN-10 title identifier <-> ISBN-13 publication element. Any ISBN-10 can be converted to ISBN-13 form (and retrospective conversion is the recommended practice in ISO 2108:2005) by mapping it into the ISBN-13 prefix-978 range and recalculating the check digit. Any application that processes ISBN-based URNs MUST be prepared to deal with both kinds of ISBNs, since instances of ISBN-10 numbers will persist that cannot be converted to the new form (e.g., ISBNs imprinted in books). ISBN-13s using prefix element 979 cannot be converted back to ISBN-10, since under this prefix, ISBNs group identifiers will be re-assigned from scratch. New books may still have ISBN-10 alongside ISBN-13 for practical reasons, but only as long as the prefix element in ISBN-13 is 978. 4.2. Encoding Considerations Embedding ISBNs within the URN framework does not present encoding problems, since all of the characters that can appear in an ISBN are valid in the namespace-specific string (NSS) part of the URN. Percent-encoding, as described in RFC 2141bis [I-D.ietf-urnbis-rfc2141bis-urn], is never needed. In order to improve readability of the NSS, hyphens MAY be used. Example 1: URN:ISBN:978-0-395-36341-6 Example 2: URN:ISBN:951-0-18435-7 Example 3: URN:ISBN:951-20-6541-X Example 3: URN:ISBN:951206541X 4.3. Resolution of ISBN-based URNs 4.3.1. General For URN resolution purposes, all elements except the check digit (0-9 for ISBN-13, and 0-9 or X for legacy ISBN-10) must be taken into account. The registration group and registrant element assignments are managed in such a way that the hyphens are not needed to parse the ISBN unambiguously into its constituent parts. However, the ISBN is normally transmitted and displayed with hyphens to make it easy for humans to recognize these elements without having to make reference to or have knowledge of the number assignments for registration group and registrant elements. In ISBN-10, registration group element codes such as 91 for Sweden were unique. In ISBN-13, only the combinations of prefix and registration group elements are Huttunen, et al. Expires August 19, 2012 [Page 8] Internet-Draft ISBN URN Namespace February 2012 guaranteed to be unique. 978-951 and 978-952 both mean Finland, but 979-951 and 979-952 almost certainly will not (once they will be assigned in the future); at the time of this writing, registration group element(s) for Finland are not yet known for ISBNs starting with 979. The Finnish URN registry is maintained by the national library. The service is capable of resolving ISBN-based URNs. URNs starting with URN:ISBN:978-951 or URN:ISBN:978-952 are mapped into appropriate URL addresses in a table maintained within the registry. Applications, such as the national bibliography or the open archive of a university, can use the URN as the persistent address of the resource. There is just one place (the URN registry) where the address is mapped to one or more physical locations. ISBN-13 prefix / registration group element combinations (and the corresponding ISBN-10 registration group identifiers, if any) usually designate a country, but occasionally a single combination / ISBN-10 group identifier is used to indicate a language area. For instance, "978-3" (or "3" in ISBN-10) is utilised in Germany, Austria, and the German speaking parts of Switzerland. As of this writing, there are two regional registration groups: "978-976" is used in the Caribbean community and "978-982" in the South Pacific (see [ISBN_PREFIX]). Note that the prefix and registration group element combination "979-3" has not yet been assigned. There is no intention to allocate the registration group elements in the same way as was done with ISBN-10. The registrant element may or may not be used for resolution purposes, depending on whether individual publishers have set up their resolution services. The publication element shall enable targeting the individual publication. 4.3.2. Practical Aspects Due to the lack of URN support in, e.g., web browsers, the URNs are usually expressed as URLs when embedded in documents. The Finnish URN registry is located at , and URNs are therefore expressed in the form http://urn.fi/. For example, the URI identifies Sami Nurmi's doctoral dissertation "Aspects of Inflationary Models at Low Energy Scales". Any national URN registry can resolve URN:ISBNs with foreign registration group element values if a) there is a URN:ISBN Huttunen, et al. Expires August 19, 2012 [Page 9] Internet-Draft ISBN URN Namespace February 2012 resolution service for that country, b) the national resolution service is aware of the existence of the foreign service and how to find it, and c) the two resolution services can communicate with one another. The PERSID project () developed such an infrastructure for the URN:NBN namespace. Alternatively, instead of linking the national resolvers together, it is also possible to build international resolvers that copy resolution data from several national services, or to create a way station which will enable the resolvers to communicate with one another. We can assume that the network of URN:ISBN resolvers will grow, and at the same time the set of services they support will also grow and become more diverse. Such development might make these union resolvers and way stations more important. If a registration group element does not identify a single country but a language area, there are at least two means for locating the correct national bibliography. First, it is possible to define a cascade of URN registries -- for instance, the German, Austrian, and Swiss national registries, in this order --, which collectively is aware of resolution services such as national bibliographies for ISBN-13s starting with "978-3". If the German registry is not able to find an authoritative resolution service, the request could be passed on to the Austrian one, and if there are still no hits, finally to the Swiss service. Second, the registrant element ranges assigned to the publishers in Germany, Austria, and Switzerland by the respective ISBN Agencies could be defined directly into the national registries. This method would be more efficient than cascading, since the correct resolution service would be known immediately. The choice between these two and possible other options should be made when the establishment of the European network of URN registries reaches this level of maturity. In some exceptional cases -- notably in the US and in the UK, where international companies do a significant portion of publishing -- the information provided by the group identifier may not always be fully reliable. For instance, some monographs published in New York by international publishing companies may get an ISBN with the registration group element "3". This is technically appropriate when the headquarters or one of the offices of the publisher is located in Germany. Information about such a book may not always be available in the German national bibliography, but via the Library of Congress systems. Unfortunately, the German/Austrian/Swiss URN registries that should in this case be contacted may not be aware of the appropriate resolution service. Huttunen, et al. Expires August 19, 2012 [Page 10] Internet-Draft ISBN URN Namespace February 2012 However, the problem posed by the international publishers may be less severe than it looks. Some international publishers (Springer, for example) give the whole production to the national library of their home country as legal deposit, no matter which country the book was published. Thus everything published by Springer in New York with registration group element "3" should be resolvable via the German national bibliography. On the other hand, when these companies give their home base also as a place of publication, the "home" national library requires the legal deposit. A large union catalogue, such as WorldCat maintained by OCLC [OCLC-WC] can be used to complement the resolution services provided in the national level, or as the default service, if no national services exist or are known to the registry from which the query originates. Due to the semantic structure of ISBN-13, the registrant element can be used as a "hint". Technically, it is possible to establish a number of URN resolution services maintained by different kinds of organizations. For instance, "978-951-0" is the unique ISBN registrant element of the largest publisher in Finland, Sanoma-WSOY. Resolution requests for ISBNs starting with "978-951-0" can be passed to and dealt with the publisher's server, if and when it is made URN- aware. In such a case, resolving the same URN in multiple locations MAY provide different services; the national bibliography might be able to provide bibliographic information only, while the publisher can provide the book itself, on its own terms. Users can expect Resolution services to co-exist and complement one another. The same ISBN can be resolved both as URN and as a Digital Object Identifier (DOI) [DOIHOME]. URN-based services hosted by, e.g., a national library, might provide only bibliographic metadata, whereas a service based on the DOI system provided by the publisher may supply the book, parts of the book or various other services. Persistence is one of the key features for any persistent identifier system. There are three inter-related aspects of persistence that need to be discussed: persistence of the resource itself, persistence of the identifier, and persistence of the URN-based resolvers. ISBNs are assigned to manifestations (physical embodiments) of books. Printed books tend to be persistent, so even after 500 years, a URN: ISBN identifying a printed book can resolve to a bibliographic description of the book, which MAY contain the location of the book. With digital books things get more complicated. According to ISO 2108, each product form must have a separate ISBN, but digital manifestation will not be long-lived. Anyone who tries to use a 100- year old e-book will probably be disappointed. Manifestations of an Huttunen, et al. Expires August 19, 2012 [Page 11] Internet-Draft ISBN URN Namespace February 2012 e-book should be interlinked (using, for instance, the work level metadata record) so as to make a user aware of the existence of these product forms. This will enable the user to retrieve the form that matches his / her interests best. Some users may prefer a modern manifestation although it might not have the original look and feel, while other users may want the original manifestation which is authentic but might require digital archaeology for access. Manifestations of e-books, like other e-resources, are not required to be persistent per se, but require successive migrations into new file formats. Employing URN:ISBN will support information architectures that enable persistent access to the relevant intellectual content (work), independent of its form, although, according to the ISO Standard, ISBNs should not be used to identify the works themselves. URN resolvers are not static. The services they'll supply will change over time, due to changes in technical infrastructure. For instance, implementation of long term preservation systems will enable and necessitate a set of new URN resolution services. Persistence of resolvers themselves is mainly an organizational issue, related to the persistence of organizations maintaining them. As URN:ISBN resolution services will be supplied (among others) by the national libraries to enable access to their legal deposit collections, we may assume that URN:ISBN resolution services will be persistent. 4.4. Additional Considerations The basic guidelines for assigning ISBNs to electronic resources are the following: o Product form and the means of delivery are irrelevant to the decision whether a product needs an ISBN or not. If the content meets the requirements of the standard, it gets an ISBN, no matter what the file format of the delivery system. o Each product form (manifestation) of a digital publication should have a separate ISBN. The definition of a new edition is normally based on one of the two criteria: * A change in the kind of packaging involved: the hard cover edition, the paperback edition and the library-binding edition would each get a separate ISBN. The same applies to different formats of digital files. Huttunen, et al. Expires August 19, 2012 [Page 12] Internet-Draft ISBN URN Namespace February 2012 * A change in the text, excluding packaging or minor changes such as correcting a spelling error. Again, this criterion applies regardless of whether the publication is in printed or in digital form. Although these rules seem clear, their interpretation may vary. As already RFC 2288 [RFC2288] pointed out, The choice of whether to assign a new ISBN or to reuse an existing one when publishing a revised printing of an existing edition of a work or even a revised edition of a work is somewhat subjective. Practice varies from publisher to publisher (indeed, the distinction between a revised printing and a new edition is itself somewhat subjective). The use of ISBNs within the URN framework simply reflects these existing practices. Mistakes can happen. For instance, an ISBN has sometimes been re- used for another book. These reasonably rare kind of human error do not threaten or undermine the value of the ISBN system as a whole. Neither do they pose a serious threat to the URN resolution service based on ISBNs. The error described above SHOULD only lead into the retrieval of two bibliographic records describing two different monographic publications. Based on the information in the records, a user can choose the correct record from the result set. Libraries routinely correct ISBN mistakes. Their catalogs provide cross references ("incorrect ISBN -> correct ISBN"). This MUST be taken into account in the URN resolution process. Further details on the process of assigning ISBNs can be found in Section 5 (Namespace registration) below. 5. URN Namespace Registration and Use The formal URN Namespace Identifier Registration for the pre-2005 version of the International Standard Book Number (ISBN) was done in RFC 3187 [RFC3187]. The new ISBN standard does not require a new namespace, but the registration is renewed here. The registrant organization has moved from Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin - Preussischer Kulturbesitz to The International ISBN Agency, London, U.K. Moreover, the description of the NSS and resolution details have been amended. 5.1. URN Namespace ID Registration for the International Standard Book Number (ISBN) This registration describes how International Standard Book Numbers (ISBN) can be supported within the URN framework. Huttunen, et al. Expires August 19, 2012 [Page 13] Internet-Draft ISBN URN Namespace February 2012 [ RFC Editor: please replace "XXXX" in all instances of "RFC XXXX" below by the RFC number assigned to this document. ] Namespace ID: ISBN This Namespace ID has already been assigned to the International Standard Book Number in January 2001 when the namespace was initially registered. Registration Information: Version: 2 Date: 2012-02-16 Declared registrant of the namespace: Registering Organization: The International ISBN Agency Designated Contact Person: Name: Ms. Stella Griffiths Affiliation: Executive Director, The International ISBN Agency Email: info@isbn-international.org Postal: EDItEUR, 39-41 North Road, London, N7 9DP, U.K. Web URL: Declaration of syntactic structure of NSS part: The namspace-specific string of 'ISBN' URNs is either an ISBN-13 (see Section 4.1.2 of RFC XXXX) or an ISBN-10 (see Section 4.1.1 of RFC XXXX); the former is preferred. Example 1: URN:ISBN:978-0-395-36341-6 Example 2: URN:ISBN:951-0-18435-7 Example 3: URN:ISBN:951-20-6541-X Example 4: URN:ISBN:951206541X Relevant ancillary documentation: The ISBN (International Standard Book Number) is a unique machine- readable identification number, which marks any edition of a book unambiguously. This number is defined in ISO Standard 2108:2005. ISBNs has been in use for more than 30 years and they have revolutionised the international book-trade. 170 countries and territories are officially ISBN members. The administration of the ISBN system is carried out on three levels: Huttunen, et al. Expires August 19, 2012 [Page 14] Internet-Draft ISBN URN Namespace February 2012 International agency, Group agencies, Publishers. The International ISBN agency is located in London. The main functions of the Agency are: * To promote, co-ordinate and supervise the world-wide use of the ISBN system. * To approve the definition and structure of group agencies. * To allocate group identifiers to group agencies. * To advise on the establishment and functioning of group agencies. * To advise group agencies on the allocation of international publisher identifiers. * To publish the assigned group numbers and publisher prefixes in up-to-date form. Detailed information about ISBN usage can be found from the ISBN Users' Manual [ISBN_UM]. A shorter introduction to ISBN usage can be found from the ISBN FAQ web pages [ISBN_FAQs], which also include guidelines for the assignment of ISBNs to e-books. Conformance with URN Syntax: Legal ISBN characters are 0-9 and hyphen for ISBN-13 and 0-9, hyphen, and X for ISBN-10. No percent-encoding is needed. Hyphen carries no semantic content and MAY be dropped from the NSS. Rules for Lexical Equivalence of NSS part: ISBN numbers are usually printed with the letters 'ISBN' and a single blank preceding the ISBN proper (for instance: ISBN 951- 746-795-8). The data preceding the ISBN MUST NOT be included in the NSS. No percent-encoding is needed. Prior to comparing the NSS of two ISBN-based URNs for equivalence, all hyphens, if present, MUST be removed and letter 'X' capitalized. Prior to comparing a URN based on ISBN-10 with a URN based on ISBN-13, the ISBN-10 MUST be converted to the ISBN-13 form. This step is necessary since the ISBN-10s may or may not be already converted to the new form; libraries SHOULD keep the old ISBN since it is the one printed in books published prior to 2007, Huttunen, et al. Expires August 19, 2012 [Page 15] Internet-Draft ISBN URN Namespace February 2012 while publishers MAY convert the old identifiers originally assigned in ISBN-10 form and use the equivalent ISBN-13s in unchanged reprints of the books, which according to the ISBN assignment rules should not receive a new ISBN. Note that, according to RFC 2141bis, the prefix "URN:ISBN:" is case-insensitive; generic URI parsing and comparison software frequently uses lower case as the canonical (normalized) form. The URNs are equivalent if the normalized forms obtained this way compare equal. Identifier uniqueness and persistence considerations: ISBN is a unique and persistent identifier. An ISBN, once it has been assigned, MUST NOT be re-used for another book or another product form of the same book. A single product form (manifestation) of a book MUST NOT get a new ISBN. 'ISBN' URNs inherit the uniqueness and persistence properties from ISBNs. Please note that the same ISBN can be used as in another persistent identifier system, such as DOI or Handle. The resulting persistent identifier SHALL NOT render the URN:ISBN non- unique; however, it might provide different resolution services than URN:ISBN. If there are multiple manifestations of a single literary work such as a novel, each one MUST receive a different ISBN. ISO has developed a new standard, ISTC (International Standard Text Code, ISO 21047-2009) that enables identification of textual works. See for more information. In the standard itself, annex E describes the relations between ISBN and other publication identifiers and ISTC. Process of identifier assignment: Assignment of ISBNs is controlled, and 'ISBN' URNs immediately inherit this property. There are three levels of control: the international agency, group agencies that typically operate in the national level, and finally each publisher is responsible of using the ISBN system correctly. Small publishers may demand ISBN numbers one at a time by contacting the ISBN group agency. Large publishers receive ISBN blocks from which they allocate ISBNs to the books according to the ISBN assignment rules. Process for identifier resolution: See Section 4.3 of RFC XXXX. Huttunen, et al. Expires August 19, 2012 [Page 16] Internet-Draft ISBN URN Namespace February 2012 Validation mechanism: The check digit helps to assure the correctness of an ISBN number assigned for a book when it has been entered or processed. Applications processing bibliographic data such as integrated library systems MAY check the correctness of both ISBN-10 and ISBN-13 (and make conversions between the two). If the number is wrong due to, e.g., a typing error made by a publisher, a correct ISBN SHOULD be assigned afterwards. Although the book will only contain the wrong number, national bibliography and system used by the book trade often will contain both the wrong and new, correct ISBN number. Scope: ISBN is a global identifier system used for identification of monographic publications. It is very widely used and supported by the publishing industry. 6. Security Considerations This document proposes means of encoding ISBNs within the URN framework. An ISBN-based URN resolution service is depicted here both for ISBN-10 and ISBN-13, but only in a fairly generic level; thus questions of secure or authenticated resolution mechanisms are excluded. It does not deal with means of validating the integrity or authenticating the source or provenance of URNs that contain ISBNs. Issues regarding intellectual property rights associated with objects identified by the ISBNs are also beyond the scope of this document, as are questions about rights to the databases that might be used to construct resolvers. Beyond the generic security considerations laid out in the underlying documents listed in the Normative References (Section 9.1), no specific security threats have been identified for ISBN-based URNs. 7. IANA Considerations IANA is asked to update the existing registration of the Formal URN Namespace 'ISBN' using the template given above in Section 5.1, which follows the outline specified in RFC 3406bis [I-D.ietf-urnbis-rfc3406bis-urn-ns-reg]. 8. Acknowledgements This draft version is the outcome of work started in 2008 and brought to the IETF in 2010 to launch a much larger effort to revise the basic URN RFCs. The aim in the IETF is to bring these RFCs in Huttunen, et al. Expires August 19, 2012 [Page 17] Internet-Draft ISBN URN Namespace February 2012 alignment with the current URI Standard (STD 63, RFC 3986), ABNF, and IANA guidelines. The participants of project PERSID () contributed significantly to the standards work. Leslie Daigle has provided valuable guidance in the initial draft stage of this memo. Stella Griffiths has advised and guided the development of this document, has verified the technical content from the director's view of the International ISBN Agency, and provided valuable comments. Larry Masinter, Subramanian Moonesamy, Julian Reschke, and other participants of the URNbis working group have provided review comments and text suggestions that have improved this document. 9. References 9.1. Normative References [I-D.ietf-urnbis-rfc2141bis-urn] Hoenes, A., "Uniform Resource Name (URN) Syntax", draft-ietf-urnbis-rfc2141bis-urn-01 (work in progress), October 2011. [I-D.ietf-urnbis-rfc3406bis-urn-ns-reg] Hoenes, A., "Uniform Resource Name (URN) Namespace Definition Mechanisms", draft-ietf-urnbis-rfc3406bis-urn-ns-reg-01 (work in progress), October 2011. [ISO1] ISO, "Information and documentation - The International Standard Book Number (ISBN)", ISO 2108-1992, 1992. [ISO2] ISO, "Information and documentation - The International Standard Book Number (ISBN)", ISO 2108-2005, 2005. [RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997. [RFC3986] Berners-Lee, T., Fielding, R., and L. Masinter, "Uniform Resource Identifier (URI): Generic Syntax", STD 66, RFC 3986, January 2005. Huttunen, et al. Expires August 19, 2012 [Page 18] Internet-Draft ISBN URN Namespace February 2012 9.2. Informative References [DOIHOME] International DOI Foundation, "The Digital Object Identifier System", . [IANA-URI] IANA, "URI Schemes Registry", . [IANA-URN] IANA, "URN Namespace Registry", . [ISBNORG] International ISBN Agency, "", . [ISBN_FAQs] International ISBN Agency, "ISBN Prefix Ranges", . [ISBN_PREFIX] International ISBN Agency, "ISBN Prefix Ranges", . [ISBN_UM] International ISBN Agency, "ISBN Users' Manual", . [OCLC-WC] OCLC WorldCat, "WorldCat.org: The World's Largest Library Catalog", . [RFC2141] Moats, R., "URN Syntax", RFC 2141, May 1997. [RFC2288] Lynch, C., Preston, C., and R. Jr, "Using Existing Bibliographic Identifiers as Uniform Resource Names", RFC 2288, February 1998. [RFC2611] Daigle, L., van Gulik, D., Iannella, R., and P. Faltstrom, "URN Namespace Definition Mechanisms", BCP 33, RFC 2611, June 1999. [RFC3044] Rozenfeld, S., "Using The ISSN (International Serial Standard Number) as URN (Uniform Resource Names) within an ISSN-URN Namespace", RFC 3044, January 2001. [RFC3187] Hakala, J. and H. Walravens, "Using International Standard Book Numbers as Uniform Resource Names", RFC 3187, October 2001. Huttunen, et al. Expires August 19, 2012 [Page 19] Internet-Draft ISBN URN Namespace February 2012 [RFC3406] Daigle, L., van Gulik, D., Iannella, R., and P. Faltstrom, "Uniform Resource Names (URN) Namespace Definition Mechanisms", BCP 66, RFC 3406, October 2002. Appendix A. Draft Change Log [[ RFC-Editor: Whole section to be deleted before RFC publication. ]] A.1. draft-hakala-rfc3187bis-isbn-urn-00 to draft-ietf-urnbis-*-00 - formal updates for a WG draft; - RFC 2288 now obsoleted and made Historic; - added references to rfc2141bis and rfc3406bis; - Sect.3 reorganized and amended: Namespace/Community Considerations; - registration template adapted to rfc3406bis [-00]; - numerous editorial fixes and improvements. A.2. draft-ietf-urnbis-rfc3187bis-isbn-urn-00 to -01 - discussion on persistence altered, based on list discussion; - changes and amendments to discussion of URN resolution services; - discussion of fragment part usage added; - broken link to ISBN manual fixed based on feedback from [ISBNORG]; - various editorial fixes and enhancements. A.3. draft-ietf-urnbis-rfc3187bis-isbn-urn-01 to -02 - addressed review comments by LM and SM; - cleanup of requirements language, but - kept RFC 2119 terms where non-canonical/non-intuitive behavior of resolver systems is specified; - URLs for ISBN user manual (new public version) etc. updated; - numerous editorial updates, fixes, and enhancements. Authors' Addresses Maarit Huttunen The National Library of Finland P.O. Box 26 Helsinki, Helsinki University FIN-00014 Finland EMail: maarit.huttunen@helsinki.fi Huttunen, et al. Expires August 19, 2012 [Page 20] Internet-Draft ISBN URN Namespace February 2012 Juha Hakala The National Library of Finland P.O. Box 15 Helsinki, Helsinki University FIN-00014 Finland EMail: juha.hakala@helsinki.fi Alfred Hoenes (editor) TR-Sys Gerlinger Str. 12 Ditzingen D-71254 Germany EMail: ah@TR-Sys.de Huttunen, et al. Expires August 19, 2012 [Page 21]