- From: Pat Hayes <phayes@ihmc.us>
- Date: Tue, 24 Jan 2006 23:30:35 -0600
- To: "Booth, David (HP Software - Boston)" <dbooth@hp.com>
- Cc: "Ben Adida" <ben@mit.edu>, "SWBPD list" <public-swbp-wg@w3.org>, "public-rdf-in-xhtml task force" <public-rdf-in-xhtml-tf@w3.org>
>I hate to say this, but I think the URI identity issues that Alistair >raised in email[3] after yesterday's teleconference are important enough >to delay publication until they are either fixed or visibly marked as >problems. The WebArch document is clear that URI collisions[4] are A >Bad Thing. It would seem wrong to endorse such collisions, even >implicitly. I beg to differ. [4] has a clear and explicit description (at http://www.w3.org/TR/webarch/#indirect-identification ) of a condition which seems to apply almost perfectly to the situation which arises in RDF/A and which Alistair deplores, and which is correctly described as not constituting a URI collision. Using the same name to refer both to a thing, and to a piece of a document which itself refers to the same thing, seems clearly to be an example of indirect reference. As [4] says, somewhat pithily," Identifiers are commonly used in this way." It is impossible, both practically and theoretically, to completely avoid all ambiguity in using referential names. Reference is not access. While URLs must be unambiguous locators, in the sense of resolving unambiguously to a particular Web resource, referential names - which is how URI references are used in RDF - cannot possibly be specified so exactly as to refer uniquely and unambiguously in all circumstances. Even globally recognizable proper names like "Mount Everest" do not have unique referents in all possible circumstances, since the exact referent depends on the ontological framework being mutually assumed (Where is the exact edge of a mountain? Are we talking about people as agents or as medical cases? At a particular time or as endurants? etc..) Under these circumstances, to view every referential ambiguity as a Bad Thing is about as useful as trying to stamp out breathing. Like words in human language, URIs can be safely overloaded under conditions which allow possible misunderstandings to be securely resolved by their local context, without requiring negotiation: and this need not even require that the resolution be actually done, provided that the necessary context - which is the case under discussion, is likely to be the ontology identified by the root URI of the RDF property - can be accessed when required. In English we safely use "bank" to refer to a side of a river, a turning motion or a building, in part because these meanings are so divergent that the ambiguity can almost always be immediately resolved by the immediate context. Similarly, an email address can be safely used to refer to its owner in part because almost anything that can be coherently said about a person could not possibly apply to an email account, and vice versa. Even the use of a literal string in a context which requires a reference to a named agent can be interpreted as making sense, since it clearly requires a coercion, and it would be natural to use the string as a referring name. Whether or not this is in some fundamental sense 'correct' or 'proper' is not worth discussing: what matters is only that a community of agents all agree to use the same kind of coercion strategy when it is required, which allows strings to be used to refer to agents; and to the extent they do, then they thereby become genuinely referring names. This is how the world comes to use language, both in the large and in the small (http://www.economist.com/science/displayStory.cfm?story_id=5135495). I suggest that if current real-world usage of a metadata vocabulary seems to be causing no actual operational problems, it might be better to study this real-world usage carefully with a view to learning something about how symbols actually are being used on the Web, than to set out to take great pains to improve it. In the meantime, I also suggest that RDF/A might usefully use the term "indirect identification" to point out that subjects of RDF triples can both be pieces of XML markup and also refer to entities in the real world, and that this need not be deplored as harmful ambiguity. Pat Hayes >David Booth > >[3] Identity issues raised by Alistair: >http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/public-swbp-wg/2006Jan/0113.html >[4] TAG's Web Architecture: >http://www.w3.org/TR/webarch/#URI-collision > > >> -----Original Message----- >> From: public-swbp-wg-request@w3.org >> [mailto:public-swbp-wg-request@w3.org] On Behalf Of Ben Adida >> Sent: Tuesday, January 24, 2006 12:03 PM >> To: SWBPD list >> Cc: public-rdf-in-xhtml task force >> Subject: [ALL] RDF/A Primer Version >> >> >> >> >> Hi all, >> >> I made a mistake in the version of the RDF/A Primer that I presented >> at the telecon yesterday. I have just finished uploading the right >> version, which you can find here: >> >> http://www.w3.org/2001/sw/BestPractices/HTML/2006-01-24-rdfa-primer >> >> With the WG and specifically the reviewers' approval (DBooth, >> GaryNg, >> and also "unofficial" reviewers), I am hoping that we can rapidly >> agree that this latest version should be the one that becomes our >> first published WD. >> >> The only difference in content is that the new version has an extra >> section (section #2), and the old sections 2 and 3 are merged into >> the new section 3 for purely organizational purposes (no text >> is lost >> or added in those sections, just reorganized.) The point of the new >> section 2 is to add an even simpler introductory example. We believe >> this additional section is in line with the comments we >> received from >> reviewers, both official and earlier, unofficial reviews. In >> fact, we >> began writing it in part to respond to some of these early >> comments 2 >> weeks ago. >> >> The already-approved version is still at the old URL for >> comparison: >> http://www.w3.org/2001/sw/BestPractices/HTML/2006-01-15-rdfa-primer >> >> I want to stress that this is entirely *my* mistake: the TF had >> agreed [1,2] that this second version would be presented to the WG > > yesterday, and I simply forgot. Publishing these additional examples > > now is quite important for getting the word out about RDF/A and > > making it competitive against other metadata inclusion proposals, >> outside of W3C, that are gaining traction. >> >> Apologies for my mistake. I hope you'll see that these edits do not >> constitute a substantive change to the document, rather they help >> make the same points more appealing to and understandable by >> a larger >> audience. >> >> -Ben Adida >> ben@mit.edu >> >> [1] Discussion during last segment of January 10th TF >> telecon: http://www.w3.org/2006/01/10-swbp-minutes >> >> [2] Discussion, at beginning, of Mark's new examples during January >> 17th TF telecon: >> http://www.w3.org/2006/01/17-swbp-minutes >> >> -- --------------------------------------------------------------------- IHMC (850)434 8903 or (650)494 3973 home 40 South Alcaniz St. (850)202 4416 office Pensacola (850)202 4440 fax FL 32502 (850)291 0667 cell phayesAT-SIGNihmc.us http://www.ihmc.us/users/phayes
Received on Wednesday, 25 January 2006 05:30:21 UTC