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Tim Berners-Lee: “We need data on the Web to work better together”

April 22, 2009 By: Christoph Wieser Category: Conferences & Events, Linked Data & Open Data 3 Comments →

Today, the 18th WWW conference started in Madrid, Spain. In his opening talk, Tim Berners-Lee outlined the status quo of the current Web and focused on areas for ongoing research.

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According to Tim Berners-Lee the Web is still static and consists mostly of archived HTML and PDF documents. There is still a need for a read/write Web and the standards are still not used to a sufficient extend. Changes in the Web are the ‘move to mobile’ and the climb up of ‘advertizing to being a science’.

Beside the still existing challenges of the current Web, additional ones arrived. Web Applications as well as Open Social Networking and Open Linked Data count to the area of current interest.

Web Applications are supposed to become new computing platforms and need a serious clean trust system. In the future Web Applications could offer a decentralized modular installation like a webized Debian.

Open Social Networking has become a great application in the Web. Currently it suffers from the ‘Social Silo Problem’. Users have often accounts in several platforms like Facebook or MySpace. The platforms, however, are separated from each other like in a field of silos. The challenge of the Semantic Web Community is now to interconnect the silos via RDF, OWL, HTTP, and SPARQL. A further requirement of Tim Berners-Lee are to focus on a Secure Web id.

Open Linked Data attracted the attention of Tim Berners-Lee most of all. Being one of the chairs of the co-located workshop ‘Linked Data on the Web’ he stressed that “we need data on the Web to work better together” in government, enterprise, and science. Open Linked Data could be a wizard for users of existing relational database systems. As query language he proposed a federated/delegated SPARQL.

Finally, Tim Berners-Lee described the role of researchers in those challenges. Researchers should ‘build a platform for others that follow’. Thereby, one should not assume what people will use the platform for.

(Report by Christoph Wieser / Salzburg Research)

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M. Veytsel: From Signal to Impact

May 20, 2008 By: Jana Herwig Category: Calls & Competitions, Linked Data & Open Data 2 Comments →

[This article was written by guest author Mike Veytsel and originally submitted as an entry in our LinkedData Vision Competition]

Signal: The Long Tail

The central problem of the internet today is the relative lack of organization of the massive store of information which already exists, and is continually being generated at rapid rates. With the diversity of personal interests, one persons signal is another ones noise, so finding and keeping track of what you’re interested in becomes an ongoing, repetitive, manual task. The semantic web holds the promise to build a to a living, input-output, web scale topology composed of a hierarchy of topics and relations interwoven through the current silo based system of sites, portals, and files, which have non-uniform systems of organization. This will allow users to easily and finely tune in to the long tail of knowledge and find content with low friction and high precision.

Delivery: From Pull to Push

The current pull model of actively surfing for content using parse-centric search engines will be heavily displaced by a push model in which users passively receive key descriptive metadata about and links to content tightly based on a users subscribed topics of interest, including people, places, events, products, etc. These personalized semantic streams (somewhat like Facebook’s Newsfeed) will aggregate from all over the web, and will become the primary mode of finding and sharing content.

Trust: Patterns of Agreement

Semantic systems will work best when closely paired with intelligent (and ideally, distributed) trust systems, which will accumulate the votes of users with real, cross-vetted identities, about the accuracy and relevance of links between units of data in the semantic topology, in order to derive areas of consensus. These votes will allow for a dynamic recommendation system, effectively turning users into automatic content filters for each other by measuring their aggregate patterns of agreement (or lack thereof). Such systems are already becoming feasible with the emergence of social platforms (ie: Facebook, Open Social, Plaxo, Ning) and open authentication standards (ie: OpenID, OAuth), which can serve as identity hubs to be layered on top of.

Impact: The Feedback Loop

Good information allows for good decisions. Semantic metadata will increasingly create a focused, directed, and personalized flow of information gathered from a distributed network of minds. As this happens, information can be found more quickly and with less friction by more people, and so, allow them to respond faster, more effectively, and in new ways, both individually or collectively. This tightening of the feedback loop will accelerate change (or at least the potential for change) much in the same way that the mainstreaming of the internet itself had on society by opening up new venues and channels for information and interaction. The semantic web represents another such quantum leap, and its impact will be global, multifaceted, and powerful.

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