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There is a lot of material in archives that will never be put online, but there is a need for a IIIF manifest for that material as a place to "hang" public annotations off of.
Variation(s)
We're working on an audio-specific case (for AudiAnnotate), but there is likely applications for items that have not been digitized yet or for copyrighted or restricted image material.
We've also had discussions of a IIIF manifest as a "football" that is passed from system to system, with each enhancing the data available about the object. (In this case, the initial manifest is metadata about a document that hasn't been digitized, then a later process/system adds the digitized images, then a later process/system adds transcription, then another might add scholarly annotations, and then the whole set of things is passed to a publishing system.)
Proposed Solutions
We'll have a sample IIIF manifest for annotations on a reading-room only audio file shortly.
(checking in on this while rounding up Auth-labelled issues)
Scenarios
The canvas has no painting annotations (but may have other annotations, as well as metadata etc (i.e., it has an empty items property)
The canvas does have one (or more) painting annotations, but the image/image service/other media is access-controlled: the image is restricted, or not for public consumption, etc; but still available to some people (e.g., staff).
The second of these is IIIF auth, but I don't think there is anything specific to this use case that isn't part of normal IIIF auth
Description
There is a lot of material in archives that will never be put online, but there is a need for a IIIF manifest for that material as a place to "hang" public annotations off of.
Variation(s)
We're working on an audio-specific case (for AudiAnnotate), but there is likely applications for items that have not been digitized yet or for copyrighted or restricted image material.
We've also had discussions of a IIIF manifest as a "football" that is passed from system to system, with each enhancing the data available about the object. (In this case, the initial manifest is metadata about a document that hasn't been digitized, then a later process/system adds the digitized images, then a later process/system adds transcription, then another might add scholarly annotations, and then the whole set of things is passed to a publishing system.)
Proposed Solutions
We'll have a sample IIIF manifest for annotations on a reading-room only audio file shortly.
Additional Background
https://github.com/hipstas/AudiAnnotate
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