- From: Manu Sporny <msporny@digitalbazaar.com>
- Date: Wed, 06 May 2009 11:22:57 -0400
Ian Hickson wrote: > On Tue, 5 May 2009, Manu Sporny wrote: >> Creating a Microformat is a very time consuming prospect, including: >> >> ... Microformats Due Diligence Rules ... > > Are you saying that RDF vocabularies can be created _without_ this due > diligence? What I am saying is that the amount of due diligence that goes into a particular vocabulary should be determined by the community that will use the vocabulary. Some of these will be large communities and will require an enormous amount of due diligence, others will be very small communities, which may not require as much due diligence as larger communities, or they may have a completely different process to the Microformats process. The key here is that a micro-data approach should allow them to have the flexibility to create vocabularies in a distributed manner. Ian Hickson wrote: > On Tue, 5 May 2009, Ben Adida wrote: >>> Ian Hickson wrote: >>>>> Are you saying that RDF vocabularies can be created _without_ this >>>>> due diligence? >>> >>> Who decides what the right due diligence is? > >The person writing the vocabulary, presumably. Your stance is a bit more lax than mine on this. I'd say that it is the community, not solely the vocabulary author, that determines the right amount of due diligence. If the community does not see the proper amount of due diligence going into vocabulary creation, or the vocabulary does not solve their problem, then they should be free to develop a competing alternative. This is especially true because the proper amount of due diligence can easily become a philosophical argument - each community can have a perfectly rational argument to do things differently when solving the same problem. Your position, that the vocabulary author decides the proper amount of due diligence, is rejected in the Microformats community. In the Microformats community, every vocabulary has the same amount of due diligence applied to it. I think that this is a good thing for that particular community, but it does have a number of downsides - scalability being one of them. It creates a bottleneck - we can only get so many vocabularies through our centralized, community-based process and the barrier to creating a vocabulary is very high. As a result, we don't support small community vocabularies and only support widely established publishing behavior (contact information, events, audio, recipes, etc). So, maybe this requirement should be added to the micro-data requirements list: If micro-data is going to succeed, it needs to support a mechanism that provides easy, distributed vocabulary development, publishing and re-use. -- manu -- Manu Sporny President/CEO - Digital Bazaar, Inc. blog: A Collaborative Distribution Model for Music http://blog.digitalbazaar.com/2009/04/04/collaborative-music-model/
Received on Wednesday, 6 May 2009 08:22:57 UTC