Re: How the father of the World Wide Web plans to reclaim it from Facebook and Google

:) thanks Tim but I think that is the million dollar question that you and
I won't solve on our own.
I'd be interested to hear ideas though

On 15 August 2016 at 11:56, Timothy Holborn <timothy.holborn@gmail.com>
wrote:

> nice.  Adrian, lets take that off-line and come-up with a solution, then
> report back...
>
> On Mon, 15 Aug 2016 at 19:50 Adrian Hope-Bailie <adrian@hopebailie.com>
> wrote:
>
>> From the article: "The question is whether architecture will be enough."
>>
>> The answer is no.
>> We live in world where few ideas succeed without a strong business case.
>> The architecture is the easy part.
>>
>> On 14 August 2016 at 10:49, Timothy Holborn <timothy.holborn@gmail.com>
>> wrote:
>>
>>> Hi Anders,
>>>
>>> I'm using this email to respond to both [1] in creds; in addition to the
>>> below, with some lateral considerations.
>>>
>>> See this video where Mr Gates and Mr Musk are discussing in China AI [2].
>>>
>>> I haven't fully considered the implications, whilst i've certainly been
>>> considering the issue; i have not fully considered it, and as modern
>>> systems become subject to government contracts as may be the case with
>>> enterprise solutions such as those vended by IBM [3], may significantly
>>> lower the cost for government / enterprise, in seeking to achieve very
>>> advanced outcomes - yet i'm unsure the full awareness of how these systems
>>> work, what potential exists for unintended outcomes when work by
>>> web-scientists[4][5] becomes repurposed without their explicit and full
>>> consideration of the original designers for any extended use of their
>>> works, what the underlying considerations are by those who are concerned
>>> [6][7] and how these systems may interact with more advanced HID as i've
>>> kinda tried to describe recently to an audience here [8] and has been
>>> further discussed otherwise [9] [10].
>>>
>>> I'm a little concerned about the under-resourcing that seems to plague
>>> Manu's / Dave's original vision (that included WebDHT) to the consultative
>>> approach that i believed had alot of merit in how it may interact with the
>>> works of RWW at the time (alongside WebID) which have al progressed, yet,
>>> not seemingly to a solution that i think is 'fit for purpose' in attending
>>> to the issues before us.
>>>
>>> I have considered the need for people to own their own biometric
>>> signatures.  I have considered the work by 'mico-project'[11] seems to be a
>>> good supporter of these future works, particularly given the manner in
>>> which these works support LDP and other related technologies...
>>>
>>> But the future is still unknown, and what worries me most; is those who
>>> know most about A.I. may not be able to speak about it as a citizen or
>>> stakeholder in the manner defined by way of a magna carta, such as is the
>>> document that hangs on my wall when making such considerations more broadly
>>> in relation to my contributory work/s.
>>>
>>> i understand this herein; contains an array of fragments; yet, am trying
>>> to format schema that leads others to the spot in which i'm processing
>>> broader ideas around what, where and how; progress may be accelerated and
>>> indeed adopted by those capable of pushing it forward.
>>>
>>> I remember the github.com/Linkeddata team (in RWW years) wrote a bunch
>>> of things in GO, which is what the IPFS examples showcase, and without
>>> providing exhaustive links, i know Vint has been working in the field of
>>> inter-planetary systems [13], therein also understanding previous issues
>>> relating to JSON-LD support (as noted in [1] or [14] ), which in-turn may
>>> also relate to other statements made overtime about my view that some of
>>> the works incubated by credentials; but not subject to IG or potential WG
>>> support at present - may be better off being developed within the WebID
>>> community as an additional constituent of work that may work interoperable
>>> with WebID-TLS related systems.
>>>
>>> Too many Ideas!!!
>>>
>>> (perhaps some have merit...)
>>>
>>> Tim.H.
>>>
>>>
>>> [1] https://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/public-
>>> credentials/2016Aug/0045.html
>>> [2] https://youtu.be/TRpjhIhpuiU?t=16m26s
>>> [3] http://blog.softlayer.com/tag/watson
>>> [4] http://webscience.org/
>>> [5] https://twitter.com/WebCivics/status/492707794760392704
>>> [6] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tV8EOQNYC-8
>>> [7] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open_Letter_on_Artificial_Intelligence
>>>
>>> [8] (perhaps not the best reference, but has a bunch of ideas in it:
>>> https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1RzczQPfygLuowu-
>>> WPvaYyKQB0PsSF2COKldj1mjktTs/edit?usp=sharing
>>> [9] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iTqF3w2yrZI
>>> [10] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_x_VpAjim6g
>>> [11] http://www.mico-project.eu/technology/
>>> [12] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8CMxDNuuAiQ
>>> [13] http://www.wired.com/2013/05/vint-cerf-interplanetary-internet/
>>> [14] https://github.com/ipfs/ipfs/issues/36
>>>
>>> On Fri, 12 Aug 2016 at 14:47 Anders Rundgren <
>>> anders.rundgren.net@gmail.com> wrote:
>>>
>>>> On 2016-08-11 15:16, Melvin Carvalho wrote:
>>>> > Really good article, mentions Solid and other technologies.  WebID is
>>>> mentioned by the author in the comments too ...
>>>> >
>>>> > http://www.digitaltrends.com/web/ways-to-decentralize-the-web/
>>>>
>>>> One of the problems with the Web is that there is no easy way letting a
>>>> provider know where you come from (=where your Web resources are).  This is
>>>> one reason why OpenID rather created more centralization.  The same problem
>>>> is in payments where the credit-card number is used to find your bank
>>>> through complex centralized registers.
>>>>
>>>> Both of these use-cases can be addressed by having URLs + other related
>>>> data such as keys in something like a digital wallet which you carry around.
>>>>
>>>> There is a snag though: Since each use-case needs special logic, keys,
>>>> attributes etc. it seems hard (probably impossible), coming up with a
>>>> generic Web-browser solution making such schemes rely on extending the
>>>> Web-browser through native-mode platform-specific code.
>>>>
>>>> Although W3C officials do not even acknowledge the mere existence(!) of
>>>> such work, the progress on native extensions schemes has actually been
>>>> pretty good:
>>>> https://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/public-webappsec/2016Aug/0005.html
>>>>
>>>> This is approach to decentralization is BTW not (anymore) a research
>>>> project, it is fully testable in close to production-like settings today:
>>>> https://test.webpki.org/webpay-merchant
>>>>
>>>> The native extensions also support a _decentralized_development_model_for_Web_technology_,
>>>> something which is clearly missing in world where a single browser vendor
>>>> has 80% of the mobile browser market!
>>>>
>>>> Anders
>>>>
>>>>
>>

Received on Tuesday, 16 August 2016 12:52:14 UTC