- From: Steve Speicher <sspeiche@gmail.com>
- Date: Tue, 9 Jul 2013 09:09:02 -0400
- To: Cody Burleson <cody.burleson@base22.com>
- Cc: Linked Data Platform WG <public-ldp-wg@w3.org>
- Message-ID: <CAOUJ7JpE8A1mTsWqUQi7_hBsnHpwP7gJ1KDA4S3AXu9x_6Dhfw@mail.gmail.com>
On Sat, Jul 6, 2013 at 3:10 PM, Cody Burleson <cody.burleson@base22.com>wrote: > Team, > > Please be advised that I am now in the process of editing some of the best > practices that were thrown into the Deployment Guide (now to be LDP Best > Practices and Guidelines). In order to spare you the trouble of having to > review too much at once, I'd like to provide my edits in small (more easily > digestible) nuggets. > > Here is one that we can start with. Your "action required" is to review > and approve (+1) or comment on the following: > > *Predicate URIs should be HTTP URLs > * > *BEFORE:* > > This was removed from the spec: >> >> 4.1.7 Predicate URIs used in LDPR representations SHOULD be HTTP URLs. >> These predicate URIs MUST identify LDPRs whose representations are >> retrievable. LDPR servers SHOULD provide an RDF Schema !RDF-SCHEMA >> representation of these predicates. >> >> As part of the discussion around ISSUE-9 it was seen as most likely this >> should be implementation guidance. >> > * > AFTER:* > > URIs are used to uniquely identify resources and URLs are used to locate >> resources on the Web. That is to say that a URL is expected to resolve to >> an actual resource, which can be retrieved from the host. A URI, on the >> other hand, may also be a URL, but it does not have to be; it may refer to >> something that has no retrievable representation. >> >> One of the fundamental ideas behind Linked Data is that the things >> referred to by HTTP URIs can actually be looked up ("dereferenced"). It is >> therefor ideal that predicate URIs identify LDPRs with representations that >> are retrievable. LDP servers should at least provide [RDF-SCHEMA] >> representations of these predicates where possible. >> >> Of course, it is also a common practice to reuse properties from >> vocabularies that you don't own. In this case, you typically have no >> control over the result when attempting to dereference the URI. For this >> reason, publishers who wish to make their vocabularies useful for linking >> data should strive to provide a retrievable representation of the >> properties their vocabularies define. Consequently, implementers are also >> expected to use this standard as a benchmark for which to judge the >> efficacy of a vocabulary's use for linking data. > > Hi Cody, This is good guidance, so +1. I might say that you could in your 2nd paragraph you could refer directly to "Linked Data rule #2 - Use HTTP URIs so that people can look up those names. " - Steve Speicher > -- > Cody Burleson > >
Received on Tuesday, 9 July 2013 13:09:28 UTC