Re: W3C position on URIs http:// vs. https://

Hi Pat!

While this could work in principle, in practice there are likely millions
of lines of code like this:

>>> if pred == "http://www.w3.org/2004/02/skos/core#altLabel":
>>>   ...

or

>>> if pred == SKOS.altLabel:
>>>    ...

That would need to be rewritten to be s-transparent. Perhaps not Y2K code
rewrite levels, but a lot. For some of those codebases there may be
efficiency considerations - string equality is fast, string processing can
be slow.

A lot of libraries use objects rather than strings which would allow for
custom definitions of ==, but this would be a big breaking change, some
applications may depend on http and https being inequal.

Nevertheless it might be an idea to build for the future. Core libraries
like rdflib, jena, owlapi could provide sTransparentEquals operations and
sNormalize functions such that developers can start writing more
future-proof code. Care would have to be taken in defining how sTransparent
and legacy codebases interact. It may be difficult for sTransparent code to
be s-preserving, which would necessitate complicated re-normalization if
codebases are to be mixed. I'm imagining strange bugs in what is already
quite a complicated layered stack (owl over rdf, I'm looking at you). And I
fear that using a non-standard equality operator would make a lot of semweb
code look even more opaque than it already is.

I think a lot of information ecosystems would opt to keep the code simple,
and if forced to make the change, just bite the bullet, rewire all
accessible RDF and provide converters to help do this.

Both options have high costs, which is why in OBO we have no plans to
change our existing http PURLs. But we don't know if there will be further
developments that make continued use of http difficult.

   ...
   ...

On Tue, Jun 13, 2023 at 12:49 PM Patrick J. Hayes <phayes@ihmc.org> wrote:

> (On a more constructive note…)
>
> Chris, greetings. I agree with everything you say here, but wonder whether
> there might be a slightly less painful way to bring the Sweb up to date
> than rewriting every extant ontology.
>
> The Web is much bigger than the total Sweb, including all the RDF/OWL
> ontologies, but that is probably bigger than the sum total of the code of
> Sweb tools that manipulate these ontologies. So on the principle of making
> the fix where it causes least pain, could we not encourage semantic web
> tool-builders to make their engines treat URIs in a s-transparent way, so
> that http:foodleblax and https:foodelax are simply treated as identical
> when occurring in any RDF triple. I am not a developer but surely this
> would not be too onerous a task, would it? It's a tweak to some low-level
> part of the code that extracts URIs from datastructure or text. Call such
> an RDF tool 'S-transparent', then asking Sweb developers to ensure
> 'S-tranparency' would seem (?) to solve the problem and still keep other
> Web developers happy, for surely they do not care what happens to URIs
> embedded inside RDF triples, which are never used as Web identifiers in any
> transfer protocol. (Or do they?)
>
> Anyway, I will leave y'all with this thought. I'm sure it must have
> occurred to someone already in any case.
>
> If this is nonsense or unworkable, please just ignore it.
>
> Best wishes
>
> Pat Hayes
>
> On Jun 13, 2023, at 10:01 AM, Chris Mungall <cjmungall@lbl.gov> wrote:
>
> I think it's important for the semantic web community to communicate
> clearly, simply, unambiguously, and non-dogmatically when it comes to this
> issue.
>
> While I agree with many points in the TimBL article, the ship has long
> sailed. I can't show that article to web developers who are asking me why
> we don't change our PURLs to https, because chrome refuses to allow
> downloads of them when linked from an https site. They don't understand why
> we are reluctant to change, because frankly using URLs for identifiers was
> a pretty odd thing to do in the first place, mixing two separate concerns
> (semantic identity and network protocols). Browsers and http libraries can
> happily treat http and https as equivalent, but this is obviously a massive
> problem for semantic web interoperability.
>
> The lack of guidance has led to confusion. For example, it looks like
> schema.org is in some superposition state where http or https is
> considered canonical for semantic identifiers.
>
> https://github.com/solid/solid-namespace/issues/21
> https://github.com/linkeddata/rdflib.js/issues/550
>
> We are faced with this problem in the OBO community, we adopted http PURLs
> for both OWL classes and OWL ontologies around 15 years ago, rejecting
> URN-based LSIDs. We are now faced with the situation where things are
> breaking as various pieces of web infrastructure start making life for http
> difficult.
>
> We tried reading
> https://www.w3.org/blog/2016/05/https-and-the-semantic-weblinked-data/
> But the advice about URI and HSTS is hard to follow for a bunch of
> ontologists. We just want to make useful ontologies, and not be forced to
> be network engineers.
>
> Our discussion and eventual decisions are recorded here, if it's useful
> (and comments welcome if we are doing things incorrectly):
>
> https://github.com/OBOFoundry/purl.obolibrary.org/issues/705
>
> Summary:
>
> 1. Our infrastructure supports both https and http URLs, for both terms
> and ontologies, these both 302 redirect to the relevant browser or download
> (using cloudflare)
> 2. We encourage web sites that need to link to an ontology download to use
> the https URLs in HTML, but to make it clear that the *PURL is the http
> URI, and the http PURL *must* be used in RDF documents*
> 3. Even though we support https variants of http PURLs for OWL classes,
> with both 302 redirecting to the same location,* we strongly discourage
> their use in any context,* because this can lead to confusion about the
> canonical URL to use in RDF/OWL documents. We don't want to end up in the
> schema.org situation. We are building lots of tooling that will check for
> cases where https is used accidentally in a linked data context, as we
> expect this to happen a lot.
>
> This has been sufficient to placate frustrated web developers, but it
> feels like we are delaying the inevitable and that there will one day be
> pressure to deprecate our http PURLs and switch to https. This would have a
> massive cost in terms of rewiring massive distributed troves of RDF data
> and OWL documents, database tables, and a highly painful, long, and
> confusing transition period. But we are hoping that this day never comes or
> we can delay it as long as possible, or LLMs will make the whole thing
> irrelevant.
>
> On Tue, Jun 13, 2023 at 8:48 AM Melvin Carvalho <melvincarvalho@gmail.com>
> wrote:
>
>>
>>
>> út 13. 6. 2023 v 17:37 odesílatel Hubauer, Thomas <
>> thomas.hubauer@siemens.com> napsal:
>>
>>> Hi SemWeb community,
>>>
>>>
>>> One of my projects is considering making some of our ontologies
>>> accessible to customers. As part of these considerations, we have been
>>> discussing resolving ontology references (e.g. for imports) which lead us
>>> to some lengthy arguments about http:// vs. https:// as protocol part
>>> in our URIs (primarily ontology URIs, potentially element URIs as well).
>>>
>>>
>>> I am aware of a 2016 post (
>>> https://www.w3.org/blog/2016/05/https-and-the-semantic-weblinked-data/)
>>> stating that W3C currently considers http and https to be “equivalent” for
>>> w3c.org. However, the security guys I am working with are not too happy
>>> with this as using a http URI for downloading imported ontologies is
>>> vulnerable to a man-in-the-middle attack.
>>>
>>>
>>> I was unable to find any more recent statement by the W3C on the use of
>>> http vs. https. Specifically, I’d be interested to understand if this
>>> community (and the W3C) intend to stick with http for the foreseeable
>>> future, of if there’s any plans to migrate some/all URIs (e.g. ontology
>>> URIs but not element URIs) to https ? Would be nice for us to understand
>>> what “the outer world” plans so we can maybe take this as a blueprint for
>>> our own guidance on URIs.
>>>
>>
>> I'm with TimBL on this:
>>
>> "HTTPS Everywhere" considered harmful
>>
>> https://www.w3.org/DesignIssues/Security-NotTheS.html
>>
>> The Semantic Web has been around for a couple of decades.  Is there any
>> documented instance of an MITM attack on an ontology ever causing an issue?
>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> Best regards,
>>>
>>> Thomas
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>
>

Received on Tuesday, 13 June 2023 22:54:08 UTC