Difference between revisions of "World Registry"

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TWG has no intention to replace existing and well-working registers such as ISBN (books), ISO 639 (languages) and so on.
 
TWG has no intention to replace existing and well-working registers such as ISBN (books), ISO 639 (languages) and so on.
  
We shall watch the developing registers as global legal entities register (LEI), ISNI and [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_Standard_Text_Code ISTC] and suggest additions to them.
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We shall watch the developing registers as Global legal entities register (LEI), ISNI and [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_Standard_Text_Code ISTC] and suggest additions to them.
  
 
And we are going to create the registers that has no satisfactory implementation in the world, for example: of states, religions, political internationals.
 
And we are going to create the registers that has no satisfactory implementation in the world, for example: of states, religions, political internationals.

Revision as of 02:31, 13 October 2020

TWG has no intention to replace existing and well-working registers such as ISBN (books), ISO 639 (languages) and so on.

We shall watch the developing registers as Global legal entities register (LEI), ISNI and ISTC and suggest additions to them.

And we are going to create the registers that has no satisfactory implementation in the world, for example: of states, religions, political internationals.

Already existing outer registers:

TWG-created registers:

Books and publishers

The International Standard Book Number (ISBN) is 13-digit (formerly 9-digit in 1966-70; 10-digit in 1970-2006) number for books published since the standard was introduced. Includes EAN-prefix (3 digits: 978 or 979); country or language area code (1 to 5 digits); publisher code (1 to 6 digits); publication number (1 to 6 digits); check digit (one).

There is an idea to assign ISBN-like numbers (based on national bibliographies) to old books, that were published before ISBN implementation. It is briefly described here (in Russian)

Serials (Periodicals)

The International Standard Serial Number (ISSN) is an 8-digit code used to identify unambiguously newspapers, journals, magazines and periodicals of all kinds and on all media–print and digital. Started 1975.

Public Identities

The International Standard Name Identifier (ISNI) is 16-digit identifier of publicly known natural persons, legal entities (mostly editorial) and even fictional characters. Mostly used by contributors to creative works and those active in their distribution, including researchers, inventors, writers, artists, visual creators, performers, producers, publishers, aggregators etc. Created in 2012 by librarians and therefore contains mostly names related to books.

  • ISNI Database by ISNI International Agency - over 10 million identities, including 9.4 million individuals (since the time of Diogenes of Sinope) and 789,630 organisations as of 22.11.2018. Try to find yourself there. If you fail - write a book, send it to Library of Congress and wait... Or you can register your identity for some $30 in any local registration agency - usually a role in intellectual property creation is required (it can be your blog).
  • ISNI Wikipedia Article

If you already have personal ISN, you can convert it to personal 13-digit barcode. The last issued ISNI number as of 22.12.2018 is 0000-0004-7407-1282 and while it always begins with 0000, next eleven digits (except check digit, the last in row) are enough for 100.000.000.000 (100 bn) persons. Your (unofficial) EAN-code can start with "2" (reserved 'country code' - not in use), eleven digits of personal number (5th to 15th letter in ISNI) and check digit.

For example, current Acting President of the World has ISNI 0000-0003-7830-2693. So, his personal number is 00037830269. We input 200037830269 at https://www.gs1.ch/en/home/offer/barcode/check-digit-calculator-and-ean-13-barcode-generator and receive check digit "8" and excellent barcode icon: 2000378302698.png

Legal Entities

Worldwide Legal Entities Register is being built under G20 Cannes Summit decision (2011) by Global Legal Entity Identifier Foundation (GLEIF). Now (November 2018) the LEI (Legal Entity Identifier) database includes about 1.3 million entities. Registration is voluntary, but in some countries LEI number is required for securities trade.


There still exist some private initiatives, e.g. Dun & Bradstreet’s Data Universal Numbering System (D-U-N-S Number). It started in 1963 and now includes more than 300 million businesses worldwide.


Banks