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An Entity of Type : owl:Thing, within Data Space : dbkwik.org associated with source dataset(s)

Clicking on the link on this page will redirect to Wikipedia's WebCite article.

AttributesValues
rdfs:label
  • WebCite
rdfs:comment
  • Clicking on the link on this page will redirect to Wikipedia's WebCite article.
  • WebCite is a service which may be used to archive internet documents which for one reason or another may not be available on the internet on a permanent basis. On WaterWiki, please use WebCite to archive references such as newspaper articles which may prove to be ephemeral.
  • WebCite is a service that archives web pages on demand. Authors can subsequently cite the archived web pages through WebCite, in addition to citing the original URL of the web page. Readers are able to retrieve the archived web pages indefinitely, without regard to whether the original web page is revised or removed (so-called link rot). WebCite's webpage is [1] and the Wikipedia page is [2].
  • WebCite is a service that archives webpages on demand. Authors can subsequently cite the archived webpages through WebCite in addition to citing the original URL of the webpage. Readers are able to retrieve the archived webpages indefinitely, without regard to whether the original webpage is revised or removed ("linkrot"). Such archiving is especially important in the academic context. WebCite is presently a non-profit consortium supported by publishers and editors, and can be used by individual authors and readers without charge.
sameAs
dcterms:subject
foaf:homepage
dbkwik:crossgen-co...iPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:freespeech/...iPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:heykidscomi...iPageUsesTemplate
abstract
  • Clicking on the link on this page will redirect to Wikipedia's WebCite article.
  • WebCite is a service which may be used to archive internet documents which for one reason or another may not be available on the internet on a permanent basis. On WaterWiki, please use WebCite to archive references such as newspaper articles which may prove to be ephemeral.
  • WebCite is a service that archives webpages on demand. Authors can subsequently cite the archived webpages through WebCite in addition to citing the original URL of the webpage. Readers are able to retrieve the archived webpages indefinitely, without regard to whether the original webpage is revised or removed ("linkrot"). Such archiving is especially important in the academic context. WebCite is presently a non-profit consortium supported by publishers and editors, and can be used by individual authors and readers without charge. Rather than relying on a crawler which archives pages in a "random" fashion, WebCite users who want to cite webpages in a scholarly article can initiate the archiving process. They then cite—instead of or in addition to the original URL—a WebCite address, with a specific identifier which identifies the snapshot of the page they meant to cite. Archived are all types of web content including HTML web pages, PDF files, style sheets, JavaScript, and images. WebCite also archives metadata about the collected resources such as access time, MIME type, and content length. This metadata is useful in establishing authenticity and provenance of the archived collection.
  • WebCite is a service that archives web pages on demand. Authors can subsequently cite the archived web pages through WebCite, in addition to citing the original URL of the web page. Readers are able to retrieve the archived web pages indefinitely, without regard to whether the original web page is revised or removed (so-called link rot). WebCite's webpage is [1] and the Wikipedia page is [2].
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