- IPTC Information Interchange Model
The Information Interchange Model (IIM) is a file structure and set of
metadata attributes that can be applied to text,image s and other media types. It was developed in the early 1990s by theInternational Press Telecommunications Council (IPTC) to expedite the international exchange of news among newspapers and news agencies.The full IIM specification includes a complex data structure and a set of metadata definitions.
Although IIM was intended for use with all types of news items — including simple text articles — a subset found broad worldwide acceptance as the standard embedded metadata used by news and commercial photographers. Information such as the name of the photographer, copyright information and the caption or other description can be embedded either manually or automatically.
IIM metadata embedded in images are often referred to as "IPTC headers," and can be easily encoded and decoded by most popular photo editing software.
The
Extensible Metadata Platform (XMP) has largely superseded IIM's file structure, but the IIM image attributes are defined in the "IPTC Core" schema for XMP and most image manipulation programs keep the XMP and non-XMP IPTC attributes synchronized.Because of its nearly universal acceptance among photographers — even amateurs — this is by far IPTC's most widely used standard. On the other hand, the use of IIM structure and metadata for text and graphics is mainly limited to European news agencies.
Overview
IIM attributes are widely used and supported by many image creation and manipulation programs. Almost all the IIM attributes are supported by the
Exchangeable image file format (Exif), a specification for the imagefile format used bydigital camera s.IIM metadata can be embedded into
JPEG /Exif orTIFF formatted image files. Other file formats such asJPEG2000 ,Portable Network Graphics andGIF do not support IIM.IIM's file structure technology has largely been overtaken by the
Extensible Metadata Platform (XMP), but the IIM attribute definitions are the basis for the "IPTC Core" schema for XMP.History
Since the late
1970s the IPTC’s activities have primarily focused on developing and publishing industry standards for the interchange of news. The first standard,IPTC 7901 , bridged the eras of teleprinters and computers.In the late 1980s development began on a standard (the "Information Interchange Model") that would be designed to best work with computerized news editing systems.
In particular, the IPTC defined a set of IIM
metadata attributes that can be applied to images. These were defined originally in1979 , and revised significantly in1991 to be part of the IIM, but the concept really advanced in1994 whenAdobe defined a specification for actually embedding the metadata into digital image files — yielding "IPTC headers."(Adobe adopted the IPTC IIM
metadata definitions, but not the overall IIM data structure. Photos that contain IPTC Headers appear in all other respects to be normal JPEG or TIFF images; software that does not recognize IPTC Headers will simply ignore themetadata .)In
2001 , Adobe introduced "Extensible Metadata Platform " (XMP), which is anXML schema for the same types ofmetadata as IPTC, but is based on XML/RDF, and is therefore inherently extensible. The effort spawned a collaboration with the IPTC, eventually producing the "IPTC Core Schema for XMP", which merges the two approaches to embedded metadata. The XMP specification describes techniques for embedding metadata in JPEG, TIFF,JPEG2000 ,GIF , PNG,HTML ,PostScript ,PDF ,SVG , Adobe Illustrator, and DNG files. Recent versions of all the main Adobe software products, (Photoshop, Illustrator, Acrobat, Framemaker, etc.) support XMP, as do an increasing number of third-party tools.In June 2007, IPTC in cooperation with
Ifra held the First International Photo Metadata conference, titled "Working towards a seamless photo workflow" to a standing room only crowd (over 130 attendees), prior to the CEPIC Congress, in Florence, Italy. A similar conference was held in Malta in June 2008.The IPTC Photo Metadata working group released a white paper, [Citation |last=Löffler |first=Harald |author2-last=Steidl |author2-first=Michael |editor-last=Baranger |editor-first=Walt |contribution |title=Photo Metadata White Paper 2007 |year=2007 |publisher=IPTC |url=http://www.iptc.org/goto?phmdwp2007.
The white paper discusses upcoming changes to the IPTC Photo Metadata Standards] which figured prominently at this event. The conference keynote was given by Andreas Trampe, head of the photo desk of "Stern". Other speakers included photographers such as David Riecks and Peter Krogh, photo and news agencies such asReuters ; representatives of standards bodies such as PLUS, IPTC, and IFRA; as well as spokespersons from the photo metadata implementers side, such asAdobe Systems ,Apple Inc. , Canon Inc., FotoWare,Hasselblad , andMicrosoft .The electronic presentations given by most of the speakers are available online from the [http://www.phmdc.org/ Photo Metadata Conference website] including a link to a report on each of the speakers talks
External links
* [http://www.iptc.org/pages/index.php The International Press Telecommunications Council]
* [http://www.iptc.org/IPTC4XMP/ IPTC Core schema for XMP]
* [http://www.newsml.org NewsML]
* [http://www.iptc.org/IPTC7901 IPTC Recommendation 7901 - The Text Transmission Format]
* [http://www.ap.org/apserver/userguide/codes.htm NAA/IPTC Header Codes]
* [http://www.quebecpress.com/pmcodes/iptc_codes.pdf IPTC/XMP Header Codes]
* [http://www.thirdlight.com/downloads/Metadata_whitepaper.pdf Guidance and techniques for tagging and keywording images] - Article by Third Light Ltd.
* [http://www.iptc.org/photometadata/softwaresupportlist1.php Software supporting IPTC photo metadata standards IIM and "IPTC Core"]References
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.