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Data flow: Rightsline ? OpenText Core Content - Metadata
When Rightsline records a new license, territory, usage restriction, expiration date, or royalty condition, the integration pushes those fields into OpenText Core Content - Metadata as controlled metadata. This ensures every asset stored in OpenText is tagged with the correct rights status and usage constraints, improving compliance and reducing the risk of unauthorized distribution.
Data flow: Bi-directional
OpenText can enforce required metadata before content is approved for downstream use, while Rightsline can provide clearance status back to OpenText. For example, a marketing or media team can only publish an asset after Rightsline confirms the license is active and the permitted channels are defined. This creates a controlled release process for content that depends on legal or commercial approval.
Data flow: Rightsline ? OpenText Core Content - Metadata
Rightsline contract attributes such as content type, distribution window, geography, and exclusivity can be mapped to OpenText metadata schemas and validation rules. This allows content teams to automatically classify assets by rights category, making it easier to search for usable content, filter expired assets, and apply retention or archival rules.
Data flow: Rightsline ? OpenText Core Content - Metadata
When a license is nearing expiration in Rightsline, the integration updates OpenText metadata with warning flags or review dates. Content owners can then identify assets that require renewal, removal, or replacement before rights lapse. This is especially valuable for media libraries, campaign assets, and syndicated content where expired usage can create legal exposure.
Data flow: Rightsline ? OpenText Core Content - Metadata
Rightsline rights data can be used to enrich OpenText search metadata so users only find content they are allowed to use for a specific purpose, region, or time period. For example, a regional marketing team can search for approved assets for a local campaign and exclude content restricted to other territories. This reduces manual review and speeds content reuse.
Data flow: OpenText Core Content - Metadata ? Rightsline and Rightsline ? OpenText Core Content - Metadata
OpenText can provide asset identifiers, classification details, and repository usage context to Rightsline, while Rightsline returns license status and entitlement data. Together, this supports audit reporting that shows which assets are stored, how they are classified, and whether they are currently authorized for use. Legal, compliance, and content operations teams gain a single view for governance reviews.
Data flow: Rightsline ? OpenText Core Content - Metadata
When a new licensed asset is registered in Rightsline, the integration can create or update the corresponding content record in OpenText with standardized metadata such as title, owner, license scope, and reference IDs. This gives content operations a governed master record from the moment rights are acquired, reducing duplicate entry and improving downstream workflow consistency.
Data flow: Bi-directional
If Rightsline identifies a restriction, dispute, or missing entitlement, OpenText can automatically mark the related content as restricted, hidden from search, or routed for review. Conversely, if OpenText detects missing required metadata on an asset, it can trigger a task back to Rightsline or the rights team for correction. This closed-loop process helps prevent non-compliant content from being distributed.