- From: Dan Brickley <danbri@danbri.org>
- Date: Fri, 22 May 2009 17:36:08 +0200
- To: Phil Archer <phil@philarcher.org>
- CC: "NJ Rogers, Learning and Research Technology" <Nikki.Rogers@bristol.ac.uk>, www-annotation@w3.org, public-annotea-dev@w3.org, marja@annotea.org, Semantic Web <semantic-web@w3.org>
Thanks Nikki, Phil. Good points! This also reminds me that Media annotations is moving along nicely over in a separate W3C group. See http://www.w3.org/2008/WebVideo/Annotations/ Also I've just signed up for a fresh Annotea account, as I wanted to try Annozilla (http://annozilla.mozdev.org/). It seems all the w3.org signup machine is still working, which was a pleasant suprise. It sets a user up with username and password for posting annotations. So - thinking again about how something like this would be built with 2009-era specs, I suspect OAuth might be used here. This would allow clients to be delegated an access token for reading/posting etc annotations. At the moment Annotea assumes each user has an account and the password for that account is directly shared with the apps that can post to it. Perhaps there could be benefit in having the apps (whether desktop, in-browser or website-based) use oauth tokens instead? Or perhaps I'm just being trendy and trying to use too many shiny new things? I do think that AtomPub+Oauth is worth investigating, despite premature reports (http://norman.walsh.name/2009/05/07/timing) of it's death... cheers, Dan
Received on Friday, 22 May 2009 15:36:54 UTC