- From: Christine Perey <cperey@perey.com>
- Date: Fri, 15 Jan 2010 11:19:59 +0100
- To: "Döhler, Anita, VF-Group" <Anita.Doehler@vodafone.com>
- CC: public-xg-socialweb@w3.org
Hi Anita, I suggest building a table to put Social Web guiding principles into context. First (left) column might cite the general case today (pre-Social Web, what is the problem?), middle column a concrete example of how the Social Web principle affects or benefits the user (point to a SWXG use case?) and right column with the statement of the principle. Or something along these lines. -- Christine Spime Wrangler cperey@perey.com mobile +41 79 436 68 69 VoIP (from US) +1 (617) 848-8159 Skype (from anywhere) Christine_Perey Döhler, Anita, VF-Group wrote: > > Hi All, > > We think a definition of high level principles which constitute the Social Web would be useful in the context of defining the framework for the Social Web and its concepts. > > Attached/below a proposal of so far 5 principles for dicsussion on the mailing list and/or at the next SWxG telcon. > > High level principles > > 1. What you see depends on who you are. > > 2. Once defined, you can use your connections and relationships, across different Social Networks or Social Applications. > > 3. You can expose your content (User Generated Content) to different Social Networks or Social Applications, without the need to store the content in these networks/applications. > > 4. You can define the access control on a per item basis, either per contact, or per group. > > 5. You can communicate with connections no matter which Social Network or Social Application you share. > > > Looking forward to hearing your comments w/r the need of agreeing on high level principles & their concrete content/wording, > > Regards > Dan (A) & Anita >
Received on Friday, 15 January 2010 10:20:28 UTC