- From: Brent Shambaugh <brent.shambaugh@gmail.com>
- Date: Sun, 12 Jun 2016 19:18:13 -0400
- To: Timothy Holborn <timothy.holborn@gmail.com>
- Cc: Credentials Community Group <public-credentials@w3.org>, public-rww <public-rww@w3.org>
- Message-ID: <CACvcBVpzH6BMwY1Uf-Ea2s33ypTdHQT7oVKMqR2HjbbLmBPd+Q@mail.gmail.com>
Some notes from [1] "the video from the conference" in this thread. Continuing with Vint Cerf: - How to run something from 20x years ago. - Links resolve to something from a group of likely candidates - Containers: like virtualization to run apps >From questions: - Preserve a digital version of ourselves. - Preserve apps. Right now there is an app for everything, even for "turning off a light bulb" Consolidate. It might be easier to do this if we used a web page approach. - Privacy, right to be forgotten. To forget we have to remember what to forget. Starting with TimBL: - Spoke about the Church of All Knowledge at the Internet Archive - Gives a History of the Web. - At CERN there were many documentations systems, but nobody would use them. Hypertext was a good way to do things. - Web designed without national boundaries - HTTP brought together a host of protocols like smtp and that from usenix news - Filenames good to up computer. These came from the Apollo Domain System. A lot was picking things up people had used. - You can find out where your user is, but you have to put forth some effort. - Website put up files on a server and download the httpd daemon and bingo you are a publisher - More creativity without boundaries - Utopian level of society, what happend to that - Silos. I have Twitter, Instagram for Photos, LinkedIN for professional stuff, and Facebook. It is hard to move things between them and I have to learn each ones API. - We have a deal for free hosting. People share their privacy. - Model is $ for advertising. Myth that people are happy with this, and myth that this is optimal. - Data is more valuable to me than everybody else (machines/advertisers) - Separate Apps from Data. Run Apps and get data from places I control. - URLs are human readable, but URLs are names not a location. A cryptographic hash or address by hash could be used. - w3c groups to get involved with: Social web working group, web authentication working group - HTTP 2 came out that was a major rethinking. HTTP GET could be integrated with something like GitHub to look at differences between versions. - There is lots of tech to look at. >From questions: - Top 3 promising projects: they are all wonderful in different ways. You can't put them in order, just like you can't put people in order. In apps, make the sign up experience easy. - You can make a walled garden appealing, but the Jungle is more appealing. - Design web for documents. - Standard to integrate data. Solid project. Drink Linked-Data Kool Aid. Standardize how you write things for applications. - Checkout the web foundation. - Semi-truck driven by interest to push through standards like WebGL for games or WebRTC for phone. No it is the developers, The early adopters. The day to day apps that are useful that can drive. - What is Web 3.0? A lot of people cannot mantain a connection. One direction is expressing data -- tools for exposing the web of data. - RDF URIs start with HTTP -Brent Shambaugh Skype: brent.shambaugh LinkedIN: https://www.linkedin.com/in/brent-shambaugh-9b91259 Twitter: https://twitter.com/Brent_Shambaugh On Sun, Jun 12, 2016 at 12:17 AM, Timothy Holborn <timothy.holborn@gmail.com > wrote: > TimBL is up next... > > > On Sun, 12 Jun 2016, 9:58 AM Brent Shambaugh <brent.shambaugh@gmail.com> > wrote: > >> Vint Cerf talks about a self-archiving environment as a solution to >> back-up the web. Implement a publish-subscribe feature with publishing >> restrictions. Stopped at 38:39 . >> >> >> I am going for food. Does anyone wish to continue where I left off? >> >> >> >> -Brent Shambaugh >> >> Skype: brent.shambaugh >> LinkedIN: https://www.linkedin.com/in/brent-shambaugh-9b91259 >> Twitter: https://twitter.com/Brent_Shambaugh >> >> >> On Thu, Jun 9, 2016 at 8:03 PM, Timothy Holborn < >> timothy.holborn@gmail.com> wrote: >> >>> Vint Cerf's discussion[1] at the decentralise conference [2] goes into >>> some of the "how do we store stuff for a long-time" issues. >>> >>> I've been watching it now, i think i'll need to review a few times. >>> Perhaps we could reach-out and see if a paper or a set of notes are >>> available about his thoughts on the subject.. >>> >>> Tim.H >>> >>> [1] https://youtu.be/Yth7O6yeZRE?t=23m30s >>> [2] http://www.decentralizedweb.net/ >>> >>> >>
Received on Sunday, 12 June 2016 23:18:41 UTC