- From: Myers, Jim <MYERSJ4@rpi.edu>
- Date: Mon, 15 Aug 2011 16:06:26 +0000
- To: Graham Klyne <GK@ninebynine.org>
- CC: Paul Groth <p.t.groth@vu.nl>, "public-prov-wg@w3.org" <public-prov-wg@w3.org>
> > In Issue 46 (http://www.w3.org/2011/prov/track/issues/46), Luc raised the > point that the scenario we had agreed to address included a case where the > recipient of a resource representation had no way to know its URI for the > purposes of provenance discovery. After short discussion, my response to this > issue was to introduce a new link relation type (currently called "target") to > allow this URI to be encoded in the header of an HTML document. > > Does this help? So this is only used inside an HTML entity? I.e. it is not a relationship between two entities, but is a means to embed an identifier in an entity (for HTML)? An "ID card" mechanism that would allow me to keep my rdf:resource URL on my physical body so you could connect me to my online identity is the same type of thing? Jim
Received on Monday, 15 August 2011 16:06:57 UTC