Metadata is information about the data collected. According to the Data Management Body of Knowledge (DMBoK), metadata “includes information about technical and business processes, data rules and constraints, and logical and physical data structures.” Think of it as a wrapper around data that describes it, like how packaging tells what food is in a box or a container. In the past, people interacted with metadata through cards in a library catalog. With technical advances, humans and computers have access to distinct types of metadata:
What Is Metadata?
By on- Business Metadata: Provides the meaning of data, by defining terms in everyday language without regard to technical implementation. According to the DMBoK, it “focuses largely on the content and condition of the data and includes details related to Data Governance.”
- Technical Metadata: Provides information on the format and structure of the data as needed by computer systems. Some examples of technical metadata include physical database tables, access permissions, data models, backup rules, mapping documentation, data lineage, and many more.
- Operational Metadata: This type of metadata “describes details of the processing and accessing of data,” according to the DMBoK. Various examples of operational metadata include job execution logs, data sharing rules, error logs, audit results, various version maintenance plans, archive and retention rules, among many others.
Other Definitions of Metadata Include:
- “Information describing various facets of an information asset, improving its usability through its life cycle.” (Gartner)
- “Data about Data that unlocks the Who, How, Where, Why and What value of the data.” (Dr. Peter Aiken)
- “Various kinds of information – a location, a date or a card catalog item.” (Microsoft)
- “Machine understandable information about web resources or other things.” (W3C)
- “Metadata is data in context.” (Donna Burbank & Charles Roe)
Businesses Apply Metadata to:
- Improve Data Quality
- Govern big data
- Provide context about data
- Provide data services
- Provide a data lineage
- Facilitate machine learning
- Define data
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