Re: Additional review and telecon (Tuesday) for Best Practices

I don't have time to do another full review and am very uncomfortable 
with the volume of last minute changes.

Is there a diff between the version we reviewed before and this version?

Here are a few things that I noticed in doing a quick look, no claim 
that these are exhaustive. Some of these may have been present before.

# Overall

It reads like there are two documents clashing in here. A document 
outlining a standard template for a Linked Data publishing project with 
activities like "prepare" and "announce". Plus a document containing 
best practice advice for government linked data practitioners.

I guess that was true before but the restructuring seems to have brought 
the mismatch to the fore.

Don't have a specific suggestion for how to address that in the 
available time so presumably just have to live with it.

# Abstract

Not sure that the sentences on why web of data is wonderful are really 
an abstract of the document.

Rephrase "The following recommendations are offered to creators, 
maintainers and operators of Web sites." This not aimed purely at such 
people, this is about data not "Web sites".

# Audience and Scope

These sections seem confused.  Both of them are about audience and 
prerequisites - neither of them are about scope. The Audience section 
says you should know about HTML, URIs, HTTP. The scope says you should 
know about RDF. Put these two lists of prerequisites together.

Why is there a list of Linked Data syntaxes in the scope section?

HTTP URIs are *not* a syntax for Linked Data. [Repeated in section 8].

# 1 Summary of Best Practices

"The following best practices are discussed in this document and listed 
here for convenience."

Only a subset of the document is linked and listed here. What's the 
status of the other sections?

# 4 Data Modelling

Not sure what value this section adds, it says too little. Should either 
say more or say that modelling advice is out of scope.

[I understand what you mean by "application independent modelling" but 
makes me nervous. There's no such thing as a completely neutral 
ontology, you always have to make choices about how and how deeply to 
model based on the envisioned range of use of the data, that's why 
competency questions are such an important part of the process. I guess 
it's a matter of degree, you try reduce application dependence while 
accepting that this is not an achievable goal. ]

# 5 Basic metadata

The second sentence starting "In the following section ..." is now 
incorrect.

# 6 PII

Doesn't quite seem to match our discussion on Thursday. I thought we 
proposed saying WTTEO "Don't accidentally publish PII." Sometimes the 
purpose of the publication may include PII e.g. for officials. The 
current second sentence talks about "required by law" which is too 
strong. For example, when the UK published names and salaries of senior 
government staff it was a policy decision but while it was *permitted* 
by law I don't think it was *required* by law.

#7 Specify an appropriate license

The Note is highly US specific. It was probably there before and I 
didn't pick it out then so I guess it stays but seems odd.

#8 Convert to Linked Data

Not sure what "consensus that the object and relationships correctly 
reflect the dataset(s)" means.

"The next step involves mapping the source data into a set of RDF 
statements via a script" - there are lots of ways to convert data and 
scripts are only one - there's declarative mapping languages, languages 
that do query translation rather then data translation (e.g. R2RML), 
non-script programs etc.

Again "HTTP URIs" are not an RDF serialization.

#8 & 9

Why are these two different sections?

# 12. Internationalized Resource Identifiers

Not sure how to read the last sentence:
"There is now a growing need to enable use of characters from any 
language in URIs."
Reads as if you are saying that other than IRIs is needed which I assume 
is not the case.

# 13 Standard vocabularies

The sentence starting "CSARVENón-Capadisli propose in [CSARVEN] the RDF 
Data Cube Vocabulary ..." is broken.

# 18 Publishing Data for Access and Reuse

The 5 star scale in this section is phrased for vocabularies but the 
rest of the text is talking about general data.

# 21. Announce to the public

The check list in the note repeats material from elsewhere in the 
document in a different form. It is not clear why this particular subset 
of best practice is listed again in this section.


I guess of these only the two mentions of HTTP URIs as being an RDF 
serialization and the yet-another-5-star scale in #18 are show shoppers.

Dave


On 13/12/13 20:02, Bernadette Hyland wrote:
> Hi,
> The Best Practices document has feedback incorporated & is available for
> review.[1]  Please send comments to the mailing list and the editors
> will continue responding.[2]
>
> Thank you.
>
> On behalf of the GLD best practice editors,
>
> Bernadette, Boris & Ghislain
> W3C Government Linked Data Working Group
>
> [1] https://dvcs.w3.org/hg/gld/raw-file/default/bp/index.html
> [2] public-gld-comments@w3.org <mailto:public-gld-comments@w3.org>
>
> On Dec 12, 2013, at 12:27 PM, Hadley Beeman <hadley@linkedgov.org
> <mailto:hadley@linkedgov.org>> wrote:
>
>> Hi all,
>>
>> As we agreed in today's call: [1]
>>
>> 1.  The Best Practices editors will incorporate the existing feedback
>> and send out their finalized document to the working group tomorrow
>> (Friday) by 12:00 EST / 18:00 CET.
>> 2.  The working group will then review it, send comments to the
>> mailing list, and the editors will continue responding.
>> 3.  The editors, chairs and any interested working group participants
>> will hold an informal call on
>>
>>       Telecon:  Tuesday  10:00 am EST / 15:00 GMT / 16:00 CET
>>
>> to discuss issues, resolve any conflicts and work out what changes
>> need to be made in the document.
>> 4.  The editors will then make final changes, implement PubRules and
>> return the document to the working group for final review/approval on
>> Wednesday by 12:00 EST / 18:00 CET.
>> 5.  The working group will have 24 hours for a final read to make sure
>> they're ready to vote.
>> 6.  We will meet again
>>
>>       Telecon:  Thursday 10:00 am EST / 15:00 GMT / 16:00 CET (our
>> normal time)
>>
>> to vote on publishing the document as a working group note.
>>
>> Lots to power through here, in a short amount of time… Mark your
>> calendars accordingly!
>>
>> Thanks again to everyone for their input and to the editors for
>> continuing to persevere.  Speak to you all on Tuesday!  (And Thursday.)
>>
>> Cheers,
>>
>>     Hadley
>>
>>
>> Hadley Beeman
>> Co-chair
>> W3C Government Linked Data Working Group
>>
>> [1] http://www.w3.org/2013/meeting/gld/2013-12-12
>

Received on Sunday, 15 December 2013 22:05:28 UTC