Linked Data and the US government shutdown

From: James Weinheimer <weinheimer.jim.l_at_nyob>
Date: Tue, 1 Oct 2013 09:06:54 +0200
To: NGC4LIB_at_LISTSERV.ND.EDU
Apologies for cross-posting.

With the US government shutdown, it appears as if all sites with 
.loc.gov (at least) have been shutdown as well. This would seem to mean 
that if someone were using LC linked services id.loc.gov, anything will 
fail.

Interruption with linked data services have been discussed in the 
abstract, but now we have a real example to consider. If someone were 
using the id.loc.gov site extensively for linking name and subjects, 
what would they do? Using other services, such as Amazon, if it goes 
down, you may not get some customer comments for awhile, but that is not 
such a tragedy. Not getting vital information, such as the headings, is 
a completely different matter and would result in failure in the 
catalog. There is the IT concept of "failing gracefully", so that when 
something doesn't work, it doesn't just crash, but is much more 
controlled. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Graceful_exit

I don't even know if anyone is yet using the linked data services from 
LC, but if you were, what would you do now for your patrons? I don't 
know what I would do.

Would it be possible to "fail gracefully"? This "downtime" could serve 
as a time of reflection into some of the realities of linked data that 
we all know can and will happen (again).

-- 
James Weinheimer weinheimer.jim.l_at_gmail.com
First Thus http://catalogingmatters.blogspot.com/
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Cooperative Cataloging Rules http://sites.google.com/site/opencatalogingrules/
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Received on Tue Oct 01 2013 - 03:07:24 EDT