- From: M. David Peterson <m.david@xmlhacker.com>
- Date: Sun, 10 Jun 2007 13:54:33 -0600
- To: "Richard Cyganiak" <richard@cyganiak.de>
- Cc: "Tim Berners-Lee" <timbl@w3.org>, "r.j.koppes" <rikkert@rikkertkoppes.com>, "Yuzhong Qu" <yzqu@seu.edu.cn>, "Sandro Hawke" <sandro@w3.org>, semantic-web@w3.org, swick@w3.org, phayes@ihmc.us
On Sun, 10 Jun 2007 12:37:03 -0600, Richard Cyganiak <richard@cyganiak.de> wrote: > Imagine a world where everything -- absolutely everything -- has one or > more unique barcode printed on it. Including passports and people. And > everyone has a free barcode printer. Tim has simply asserted that the > barcode on your forehead should be different from the barcode on your > passport. This does in no way preclude you from using your passport to > authenticate yourself. Okay, I *think* I'm following you. Let me think this through a bit, and then respond back with some questions such that I can properly get my head around this. Thanks for your feedback! -- /M:D M. David Peterson http://mdavid.name | http://www.oreillynet.com/pub/au/2354 | http://dev.aol.com/blog/3155
Received on Sunday, 10 June 2007 19:54:48 UTC