Authors
Spiros Mouzakitis, Dimitris Papaspyros, Michael Petychakis, Sotiris Koussouris, Anastasios Zafeiropoulos, Eleni Fotopoulou, Lena Farid, Fabrizio Orlandi, Judie Attard, John Psarras
Publication date
2017/4
Source
Information Systems Frontiers
Volume
19
Pages
321-336
Publisher
Springer US
Description
Linked Data has become the current W3C recommended approach for publishing data on the World Wide Web as it is sharable, extensible, and easily re-usable. An ecosystem of linked data hubs in the Public Sector has the potential to offer significant benefits to its consumers (other public offices and ministries, as well as researchers, citizens and SMEs), such as increased accessibility and re-use value of their data through the use of web-scale identifiers and easy interlinking with datasets of other public data providers. The power and flexibility of the schema-defying Linked Data, however, is counterbalanced by inborn factors that diminish the potential for cost-effective and efficient adoption by the Public Sector. The paper analyzes these challenges in view of the current state-of-the-art in linked data technologies and proposes a technical framework that aims to hide the underlying complexity of linked data …
Total citations
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