Re: Finding user profiles on a Social Net

I generally dislike /.well-known because it makes lots of assumptions about
the web-root being available.

Three problems with this:
1.  Others might run hosted personal pages like those hosted on about.me.
For example my sister runs a hosted store on her domain. Short of getting
the eCommerce provider to change their code, she would never be able to
implement anything social.

2.Often times an organization will have their web-root maintained by
another company. Page updates could easily overwrite a nice /.well-known
hierachy.

3. I don't know the answer to this, but how long should /.well-known be
considered authoritative? What kind of refresh interval?

When you start thinking about it, this is all a hack to accomplish what DNS
already does. DNS-SD has already solved this, and has caching, and with
zone signing, authority.

S.




On 6 June 2013 16:22, Melvin Carvalho <melvincarvalho@gmail.com> wrote:

> I was thinking about the issue of finding user profiles on a social net,
> and it's not always easy to know where a user's data will be located.
> There seems to be no well known place to get user information from a
> profile.  Which means it's harder for HTTP based social web users to talk
> to each other.
>
> One increasingly popular method is to use the /.well-known/ directory.
> The disadvantage of this approach is that is it pretty rigid and people say
> it amounts out of band hard coding.  However one advantage is that it can
> save a round trip, compared with follow your nose, and it can client
> implementations more straight forward.
>
> Taking the well known directory a logical pattern might be to register:
> *
> *
> */.well-known/user/bob*
>
> For the FSW?
>
>
> *Would it allow redirects* -- I would say yes.
>
> *What would it return* -- I would suggest linked data.  Ideally a browser
> would see html and an ajax request would see JSON, but you could start with
> just one of the two, say JSON only.
>
>
> Good idea / bad idea / too hard to implement ... thoughts?
>



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Received on Thursday, 6 June 2013 14:41:45 UTC