- From: Sean B. Palmer <sean@miscoranda.com>
- Date: Thu, 12 Oct 2017 20:40:31 +0100
- To: Sebastian Samaruga <ssamarug@gmail.com>
- Cc: W3C Semantic Web IG <semantic-web@w3.org>, www-archive <www-archive@w3.org>, public-lod@w3.org
Hi Sebastian, > Open and decentralized system: could P2P do the trick? Perhaps, one day. There were some parts of your attached draft that I did not understand: some words like "runat", and a whole paragraph in Spanish stymied my comprehension. But in general, yes, I do hope that out of today's available technologies and those that are soon to be invented, we will end up with a decentralised alternative to the web. When WebTorrent came out a while ago, I realised that we're getting to the point where we could nearly bootstrap any new network on top of the existing web using WebSockets and all the other modern goodies: https://webtorrent.io/ Not to mention the fact that we can now emulate entire Linux boxes in the browser in JavaScript, without even needing WebAssembly. What times we live in! As I mentioned in my original email, IPFS and the various blockchain based DNS alternatives are the most promising alternatives that I know of right now (if they would only combine them), but Tor is still the system with the best reach. There are some thorny questions that come up over and over though. One is how you incentivise people to store your content for you, which efforts like Filecoin are trying to solve. Another is how you manage your private keys in a system where revocation may not necessarily help. Bitcoin itself is the world's biggest experiment on that. There are also the usual problems like sybil attacks that researchers have been studying for years. Eventually I think that somebody will navigate a course through this huge landscape and come up with a great app that people can relate to, and we'll have people publishing peer to peer instead of injecting their stuff into closed silos using proprietary formats. On the other hand, this belief clearly makes me an optimist. -- Sean B. Palmer, http://inamidst.com/sbp/
Received on Thursday, 12 October 2017 19:40:57 UTC