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CMS Innovations from Thomson Reuters?
By Senior Editor – Kris Smith (@croncast)
Linking words together online is an hobby. Creating context from those words is an art. Making them work in harmony is a gift. The team at Thomson Reuters have done this for some time with their Calais project and the first consumer product from it OpenCalais.
OpenCalais is a monster database filled with linked data that can be accessed by anyone via a special API. Currently it works on an individual application level and as plugins with other popular CMS and blogging platforms. In tandem they create a more powerful experience for the publishers of new content by allowing the integration of linked data for linking, tagging and finding optional third-party resources for inspiration.
Word on the street and from a trusted source is that the Calais team has something new on the horizon – their own CMS. A release of a CMS that has semantic technologies built right into is a powerful addition to the marketplace. Many blogging platforms and CMS products available today have stagnated under the weight of their own popularity.
It is hard to innovate when you are leading the pack or trying to figure out how to make money from your product that is free. Time and resources become devoted to maintaining the status quo, patching holes and community relations and support. Not to mention that many of these tools have crept out from the minds of developers and not publishers.
The same can’t be said for Thomson Reuters Calais Initiative. With a business model built in from the inception of the project they have the ability to create value from the wealth of content that is entering their system. It is treated to some natural language processing, machine learning and prepared to link with other content. As the initiative currently exists it is the side car to better publishing as there is no status quo or hole patching. They realized this.
Throwing a CMS on top of this type of foundation is a logical move for OpenCalais to extend development and create publisher relations. There has been so little innovation in core CMS offerings that most rely on third-party developers to create additional functionality or implement API’s like OpenCalais, Zemanta and other discovery products.
An OpenCalais CMS, blogging platform or whatever comes from this group is going to be a welcome addition to the choices that publishers have available today. The closest opportunity today to creating a true semantic experience in a publishing platform that is readily available would be to install the Zemanta plugin in WordPress. It transforms the writing experience. An offering from Calais could transform the writing and CMS experience.
Update: Krista Thomas (@kristathomas) from OpenCalais got in touch to say that there is a fully integrated CMS based on Drupal called OpenPublish available now.
DISCLOSURE OF MATERIAL CONNECTION: http://cmp.ly/0
Tags: api
, machine learning
, natural language processing
, opencalais
, semantic technologies
, Semantic web
, thomson reuters
, WordPress 

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Hi Kris,
Thanks for your post on OpenCalais. We agree that our connection to the Linked Data Cloud — and the assets we are publishing there for programmatic, public use — are a big deal.
But first and foremost, OpenCalais is a Web service that lets folks automatically tag and enrich their content. They use our API to feed content into the Web service and then we return a unique document identifier as well as the tags / metadata & URIs for all of the entities, facts and events we found in the text.
We don’t keep a copy of the content people send through. We only keep a copy of the tags / semantic metadata we extract.
I wanted to put a fine point on that fact — the fact that we don’t keep the content people submit — in light of your usage of the word database in your top level description of what we do. Some folks have been confused on that front in the past.
Finally — thanks for your interest in an OpenCalais-enabled CMS. Thanks to the brilliance of the gang at Phase2 Technology in Alexandria, VA, that Drupal-based, OpenCalais-enabled CMS exists today.
It is called OpenPublish, and it is free for folks to use at http://www.opensourceopenminds.com/openpublish
Let me know if you have any questions @kristathomas on Twitter.
Thanks,
-Krista
Hey Krista,
Thanks for the reply after our brief exchange on Twitter. This comment gives our readers a more complete picture of the OpenCalais web service.
Cheers,
Kris
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