- From: WBS Mailer on behalf of Henry.Story@bblfish.net <webmaster@w3.org>
- Date: Sat, 26 Jan 2013 10:57:01 +0000
- To: public-webid@w3.org
The following answers have been successfully submitted to 'WebID definition hash ' (WebID Community Group) for The Apache Software Foundation by Henry Story. --------------------------------- What is a WebID? ---- Given that WebID's must refer to Agents, and that the WebID must be associated with a profile document, (that returns a default representation) the question here is which of the following restrictions one should have for WebIDs. Note that a URI is defined by RFC3986 and is constructed as follows: foo://example.com:8042/over/there?name=ferret#nose \_/ \______________/\_________/ \_________/ \__/ | | | | | scheme authority path query fragment Please look at the detailed arguments for each position on the wiki before selecting your preferences. For each of the three options please follow the select one of the options as described below: Please select the rank-order (1 to 3) for the options you think are acceptable (i.e. you can live with it), where 1 is the most preferred, 2 the next best and so on... You also have a donât mind and a donât want option. * [ 1 ] Choice: 1. MUST be an HTTP(S) hash (#) URI: The precise definition is: A WebID is a URI with an `http` or `https` scheme, which MUST contain a URI fragment identifier and which uniquely denotes an Agent (Person, Organization, Group, Device, etc.). The URI without the fragment identifier denotes the WebID Profile page. Please consider carefully the arguments for this position | * [ 2 ] Choice: 2. MUST be an HTTP(S) URI and SHOULD be an HTTP(s) hash (#) URI: The precise definition is: A WebID is a URI with an `http` or `https` scheme which uniquely denotes an Agent (Person, Organization, Group, Device, etc.). This URI SHOULD include a fragment identifier. For WebIDs with fragment identifiers the URI without the fragment denotes the Profile Document. For WebIDs without fragment identifiers an HTTP request on the WebID MUST return a 303 with a Location header URI denoting the Profile Document. Please consider carefully the arguments for this position | * [ 3 ] Choice: 3. MUST be an HTTP(S) URI The precise definition is: A WebID is a URI with an `http` or `https` scheme which uniquely denotes an Agent (Person, Organization, Group, Device, etc.). For WebIDs with fragment identifiers the URI without the fragment denotes the Profile Document. For WebIDs without fragment identifiers an HTTP request on the WebID MUST return a 303 with a Location header URI denoting the Profile Document. Please consider carefully the arguments for this position | Rationale: In order to get into the W3C so that it can be made a standard for a WG it will be important that we be able to distinguish WebID from OpenId. Making a WebID just be an http URI will create issues in the standard of how we differentiate ourselves from them. These and other issues require maximum clarity and simplicity in the original formulation of what a WebID is. Solution 3 inevitably opens up the whole redirect debate and will very likely require the basic spec to explain it. These answers were last modified on 26 January 2013 at 10:56:47 U.T.C. by Henry Story Answers to this questionnaire can be set and changed at https://www.w3.org/2002/09/wbs/51933/webid-hash/ until 2013-02-01. Regards, The Automatic WBS Mailer
Received on Saturday, 26 January 2013 10:57:02 UTC