If U.S. federal agencies can't be trusted to comply with the law directing them to tell us what they're accomplishing with our money, I for one look forward to seeing if AI can do it for them (us).
Lord knows, I can't do it all by myself. https://stratml.us/#WorkResults
However, based upon experience thus far, even AI may be incapable of making sense of all of the BS they continue publishing in PDF and other "creatively" amorphous formats.
In any event, if they choose not to comply with the law, why should we think that anyone else may feel compelled to do so? Might leadership by example be more effective?
Might the W3C and its groups be up for that challenge?
Owen Amburhttps://www.linkedin.com/in/owenambur/
On Wednesday, March 29, 2023 at 05:52:49 PM EDT, Melvin Carvalho <melvincarvalho@gmail.com> wrote:
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A lot of work at the W3C has been to create standards around structured data. In particular to create standards for determining URIs in data. And also giving meaning to those URIs. Some of the benefits of that are made redundant if machines can figure most of it out.
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