Home

daarticolo

Daarticolo is a term used in Italian digital publishing discourse to describe a hypothetical open standard and platform for sharing article content and metadata across publishers. The name combines da (from) and articolo (article), signaling its focus on treating articles as the unit of data exchange. In discussions, daarticolo is presented as both a conceptual framework and a reference implementation intended to improve interoperability and reuse of scholarly and media articles.

Purpose and scope

Daarticolo aims to standardize article metadata and structure in a machine-readable form to enable indexing, search,

- Metadata fields: title, authors, publication date, doi, license, affiliations, keywords

- Content structure: abstract, sections, figures, tables, references

- Provenance and licensing: versioning, source publisher, rights statements

- Interoperability: alignment with schemas such as Schema.org ScholarlyArticle and Crossref

Technical approach

The daarticolo model favors modular, graph-friendly representations using formats such as JSON-LD and RDF. It supports

Status and reception

Daarticolo is not an official standard, but it has influenced academic debates on article modularity and

See also

Semantic Web, Metadata standards, Digital libraries, Open access, Scholarly communication.

redistribution,
and
compliance
with
licensing.
Core
objectives
include
enabling
precise
attribution,
preserving
provenance,
and
supporting
multilingual
content.
Key
features
of
the
concept
include:
persistent
identifiers
and
linkage
to
bibliographic
systems,
allowing
platforms
that
implement
daarticolo
to
export
and
ingest
articles
while
preserving
metadata
fidelity.
The
approach
emphasizes
clear
provenance,
reusability,
and
compatibility
with
existing
digital-library
ecosystems.
data
reuse.
Pilot
projects
and
some
experimental
implementations
explore
its
potential
to
streamline
content
curation
across
publishers,
libraries,
and
repositories.