International Article Address (IAA)

International Article Address (IAA) is a permanent address to an scholarly online article. The International Article Address (IAA) is a modern article address. IAA is a fixed permanent international article address which auto-finds the article new article address

IAA solves the following common problems of online published articles:

  • IAA keeps article permanently online via permanent IAA address
  • IAA auto-detects any change in article online address and auto-adjusts itself to it.
  • IAA auto-detects broken article URL or removed article, and load metadata instead temporary.
  • IAA extends article lifetime by keeping article metadata and abstracted data permanently online
  • IAA allow improvement of articles allowing reader to modify article can be accept/rejected by the publisher

Accessing Article by IAA:

An IAA is a permanent address to an specific article (example: iaa.zone/23633624786), the article directly can be accessed simply by typing the IAA address in the internet browser. As example, find associated article to this IAA: iaa.zone/23633624786 use following portal:


IAA Syntax Structure:

An IAA consisted of two parts, zone name separated by an slash from 11 digit article identification number: iaa.zone/11 digits. IAA is 22 length including zone name as following example: iaa.zone/23633624786:

iaa.zone/23633624786
iaa.zone/23633624786

According to the Advanced Science Index (ASI) standard, publishers should explicitly display IAA in the described format on online published articles. IAA cannot be any arbitrary number. It is a self-verifiable number by ASI-V3 algorithm. To check the validity of a IAA, IAA validator portal is used.

IAA VALIDATOR 

  

History of Development of IAA:

Uniform Resource Locator (URL) invented in 1989. Its drawback is that when the URL of an article is broken, the reader cannot access the article. To solve this problem, Direct Object Identifier (DOI) was introduced by DOI Foundation in the US in 1998. A DOI is an assigned fixed URL to an article's actual URL. Thus, if the actual article URL changes, the publisher should adjust the new URL of the article to its DOI URL via publisher account, and if the publisher does not adjust the new URL to the Article DOI URL, the DOI URL will not work. International Article Identification Number (IAA) was introduced on 2014 by Advanced Science Index (ASI) in Germany as a permanent URL to article partly similar to DOI but with this difference that IAA address also keeps Article metadata on a separate server from article server. If the actual article URL is broken IAIN server detects it and will load the only article metadata instead with suggestions about possible new URLs of the article. Also, the publisher does not need to adjust the new URL of article manually, IAIN server finds the new URL of the article automatically and adjust it to its IAA address.




 

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