Welcome to NewsML™ 1 ...

... the versatile News Markup Language for global news exchange.

NewsML 1 is designed to provide a media-independent, structural framework for multi-media news.

Currently the IPTC works on the next version of this standard named "NewsML-G2" which will be a member of a family of IPTC news exchange format standards - collectively known as "G2-Standards". An Experimental Phase 1 package of NewsML-G2 is available for testing until 31 August 2007.
After that date the NewsML-G2 team at the IPTC continues to work on the specifications and is aiming at a release in early 2008.

NewsML 1.x versions can be applied at all stages in the (electronic) news lifecycle.

Typical use would include:

  • in and between editorial systems
  • between news agencies and their customers
  • between publishers and news aggregators
  • and between news service providers and end users.

Because it is intended for use in electronic production, delivery and archiving it does not include specific provision for traditional paper-based publishing, though formats intended for this purpose - such as the News Industry Text Format (NITF)- can be accommodated. Similarly it is not primarily intended for use in editing or creating news content, though it may be used as a basis for systems doing this.

The need for NewsML came from the continuing growth in production, use and re-use of news throughout the world, with rapid expansion of the Internet being a strong driving force.

NewsML concept in brief

At the heart of NewsML is the concept of the news item which can contain various different media – text, photos, graphics, video - together with all the meta-information that enables the recipient to understand the relationship between components and understand the roles of each component.

Everything the recipient might need to know about the content of the news provided can be included in NewsML’s structure. For example, NewsML enables publishers to provide the same text in different languages; a video clip in different formats; or different resolutions of the same photograph. NewsML’s rich metadata concept can help with things like revision levels that make it easy to track the evolution of a NewsItem over time, status details (publishable, embargoed, etc.) and administrative details, such as acknowledgements or copyright details.
NewsML has default metadata vocabularies to ease implementations but it does not dictate which metadata vocabulary is used (IPTC Subject Codes, ISO country codes etc.) – a providers just haves to indicate which vocabulary they are using. Multiple vocabularies can be utilised within the same NewsItem. For text objects in a NewsItem, the IPTC’s News Industry Text Format (NITF) is recommended.

NewsML is flexible and extensible and uses standard Internet naming conventions for identifying the news objects in a NewsItem. As such, content does not have to actually be embedded within a NewsItem; pointers can be inserted to content held on a publisher’s web site instead. This means subscribers retrieve the data only when they need to and this makes NewsML bandwidth-efficient.

(NewsML™ is a registered Trademark of the IPTC - read the Terms and Conditions of its use)

 
 

News

NewsML 1 was adopted by the Japanese Standards Association as Japanese Industry Standard (JIS) X7201:2005.
(July 2005)

New NewsML 1.2 Guidelines
the comprehensive guide for users and implementers.
Published August 2004
>> documentation page
PLUS extra documents in the new >> "Expert Zone"

NewsML sample feeds
>> examples page

NewsML presentations at the News Standards Summit in Philadelphia, PA (USA), December 2003:
(Download PowerPoint files as compressed ZIP files)

By
Laurent LeMeur (afp) - NewsML Chairman

DOWNLOAD

 

 
By Takahiro Fujiwara & Koji Tanaka (NSK, Japan)

Please read the PPT-comments for more information

DOWNLOAD
 
NewsML 1.2 released:
In October 2003 IPTC approved the latest revision of this standard. Find more in the Specifications section.
Business Wire implements a news distribution system based on NewsML. [more...]
© 2008 IPTC, International Press Telecommunications Council