Hallvord R M Steen wrote:
I'd like some way to add meta data to a page that could be integrated
with the UA's copy/paste commands.

These use cases are a good start, but the problem is that you've begun with the assumption that copy and paste would be a part of the solution.

For example, if I copy a sentence from Wikipedia and paste it in some
word processor, it would be great if the word processor offered to
automatically create a bibliographic entry.

Do you mean a bibliographic entry that references the source web site, and included information such as the URL, title, publication date and author names? That could be a useful feature, even if it could only obtain the URL and title easily.

Often, when writing an article that quotes several websites, it's a time consuming process to copy and paste the quote, then the page or article title and then the URL to link to it. An editor with a Paste as Quotation feature which helped automate that would be useful.

HTML5 already contains elements that can be used to help obtain this information, such as the <title>, <article> and it's associated heading <h1> to <h6> and <time>. Obtaining author names might be a little more difficult, though perhaps hCard might help.

If I copy the name of one of my Facebook "friends" and paste it into
my OS address book, it would be cool if the contact information was
imported automatically. Or maybe I pasted it in my webmail's address
book feature, and the same import operation happened..

I believe this problem is adequately addressed by the hCard microformat and various browser extensions that are available for some browsers, like Firefox. The solution doesn't need to involve a copy and paste operation. It just needs a way to select contact info on the page and export it to an address book. There are even web services that will parse an HTML page and output a vCard file that can be imported directly into address book programs.

If I select an E-mail in my webmail and copy it, it would be awesome
if my desktop mail client would just import the full E-mail with
complete headers and different parts if I just switch to the mail
client app and paste.

Couldn't this be solved by the web mail server providing an export feature which let the user download the email as an .eml file and open it with their mail client? Again, I don't believe the solution to this requires a copy and paste operation. However, I'm not sure what problem you're trying to solve. Why would a user want to do this? Why can't users who want to access their email using a mail client use POP or IMAP?

--
Lachlan Hunt - Opera Software
http://lachy.id.au/
http://www.opera.com/

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