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That being said, a tremendous number of intersections have appeared across the individual projects binding us closely together. Columbia has chosen to investigate the extension of BIBFRAME for art objects as Stanford looks to ingest the metadata from its art museum, The Cantor [1] , and both will have some intersection with the Library of Congress’s exploration of the use of BIBFRAME with its prints and photographs collection. Music appears as a theme in the project proposals from Cornell, The Library of Congress, and Stanford. Harvard has included a Stanford metadata expert in their exploration of geospatial metadata and BIBFRAME. The Library of Congress is working on the development of BIBFRAME 2.0 as Columbia, Cornell, and Stanford work on expanding its use into three new subject domains. The Library of Congress is also exploring the use of RDA and BIBFRAME, something that will be of use to all members’ catalog departments. Princeton’s project will build upon the annotation work developed for the first Linked Data for Libraries grant. And Stanford’s Tracer Bullet projects can help inform similar workflows at the other LD4P institutions.