IPTC's NewsCodes Taxonomies for News Will Become More Powerful in 2007



    A major expansion of the popular IPTC NewsCodes will be studied by
    members of the International Press Telecommunications Council, the
    IPTC has announced.

    Most of the world's news agencies and newspapers use IPTC
    NewsCodes, which are well-defined sets of metadata that describe news
    stories, photos and other media. NewsCodes have also been adopted by
    librarians, archivists and others who must categorize or describe
    electronic media -- even if not news related. To help both news and
    non-news users, IPTC delegates from The Associated Press, BBC and The
    Press Association will study new ways to express complex ideas about
    categorization and concepts.

    The announcement was made at the IPTC's regular autumn meeting,
    held here in October. In other business, delegates approved
    maintenance upgrades of the News Industry Text Format, also known as
    NITF, and of SportsML. Using standard XML tagging, NITF is an
    efficient markup language for general news. SportsML focuses on sports
    data -- entries, teams, results, standings and other important
    information. Both standards are in wide use globally.

    Work continues on IPTC's next-generation standards, known as the
    IPTC G2 Family, moving toward a release in 2007. The G2 Family will
    allow users a choice of staying with IPTC's current XML-based
    standards or moving to the new XML-based G2 Family. This yields
    unprecedented flexibility, allowing current software development
    efforts to be easily applied to future IPTC standards.

    The next regular meeting of the IPTC will be held in Cairo in
    March 2007. The Annual General Meeting for 2007 will be held in Tokyo
    in May.

    The IPTC, based in Windsor, England, is a consortium of the
    world's major news agencies, news publishers and news industry
    vendors. It develops and maintains technical standards that are used
    by virtually every major news organization in the world.