Re: Chartering work has started for a Linked Data Signature Working Group @W3C

Guys,

this discussion is fascinating but, with all due respect, in my view it goes way beyond what we should be talking about for this Working Group. We are aiming at a fundamental (and missing) building block to be able to, eventually, address those issues. But what this group (if accepted) aims at is how to canonicalize and hash an RDF Graph/Dataset and how to express the result in a separate RDF graph. Everything else is out of scope.

Does this solve all the issues that may be related on how we should 'interpret' what a signature means? Does this answer how the temporality of a graph is reflected in its signature? Does this solve the issue of changing vocabularies, or how this all relates to OWL? Hell no. Are these complex issues and questions that deserve answers? Hell yes. But the important point is: it is not the goal of this Working Group to do this! Future groups, under whatever name, may do this, but it is not the time and the place to discuss that.

Dan, you said:

> My point […] W3C's problem is [...] that even if you're on board with RDF, it's a slippery slope (or a majestic ascent) to things like OWL, which bring more expressivity to things which ultimately might be written in triples that are encoded in JSON and signed via bnode labelling.

I fail to understand why you claim this, Dan. The goal is a very narrowly chartered group that avoids any question related to OWL or lookalikes, and that focuses on a single issue. 

You also said:

> Saying "it's RDF" and "it's signed" --- what does that mean in practice about the stuff being signed? Presumably something more than "it could be loaded into an RDF database". But what exactly? Is the atomicity of RDF graphs being a bunch of AND-ed independent statements part of the picture, but OWL not? (unless a bunch of OWL folks join the WG?). Or is the RDF-ness of the group purely "you could convert to and from RDF and get something useful"?"

Like I said, these are valid questions but are not to be answered by this Working Group! 

You also said (in another mail):

> Signers will want to know what the W3C specs will imply about their relationship to the signed material... 

Can you tell me if the W3C spec on XML signature implies something about the relationship of the signer to the signed XML material? Can you tell me if the IETF does that in the RDA specification (rfc8017)?  My claim they do not. It is up to the application/protocol/higher level specifications that can make any such statement; the RSA spec is just the core building block. The situation is, and should be, the same for RDF signature.

Finally you also say:

> The issue isn't the naming of the WG, it's the expectations that can come with saying "this is RDF", and doing that before people start jumping on (post-pandemic) planes to fly around to WG meetings to discover their colleagues in the WG have radically different expectations...

Fine, we seem to agree the issue is not the naming of the WG. Can we, please, concentrate on what we should do with this charter to clearly focus it? What else should be put into the "out of scope" to avoid these perceived "slippery slope" effect? How do we move forward?


Cheers

Ivan



> On 11 May 2021, at 12:30, Dan Brickley <danbri@google.com> wrote:
> 
> 
> 
> On Tue, 11 May 2021 at 10:45, Phil Archer <phil.archer@gs1.org <mailto:phil.archer@gs1.org>> wrote:
> Hi Dan,
> 
> Let me see if I can help here (at the enormous risk of making matters worse).
> 
> On 'partial RDFness', that is, signing something that explicitly depends on external resources beyond the control of the signer. I agree.
> 
> Great that we agree, but I actually meant something else by 'partial RDFness' here. In the CSVW WG we called it also "half-hearted RDF-ness" once or twice.
> 
> The point: this isn't just about letting RDF people have a triples/graphs reading of some useful instance data. It is about W3C's REC-track claims that being RDF data wholeheartedly rather than coincidentally, includes constraints on the how the truth of the whole (graph/description) relates to the truth of its constituent claims.
> 
> In situations where the data is fully RDF, and for simplicity let's assume well known stable URIs everywhere in the graph, then if the graph consists of n triples t-1, t-2, t-3, ..., t-n., ... then if I claim the description is an accurate description, I am standing equally behind each triple independently. This brings with it the assurance that additional triples e.g. t-23236, can't qualify or undermine the others. If I assert G describes the world accurately, I am saying "t-1 and t-2 and t-3 and t-4 ... t-n" describe the world accurately.
> 
> If t-23236 says (of whatever entity / URI) "trueUntil": "Thursday", ... "foo": "bar", or "pa12bg12f1g12c2": "FALSE", ... their ability to pollute the rest of the graph or make it unclear whether an asserter of the graph has really asserted t-1, t-2, t-3, ... 
> 
> RDF comes with other baggage/features too. It isn't a part of RDF for schema authors to be able to say "if you don't write consent=false, then consent=true is implied". Parties  who create arbitrary JSON specs, or manage SQL database schemas, may sometimes do this kind of thing.
> 
> Many non-RDF formats don't work this way. CSV doesn't work this way. JSON doesn't work this way. XML doesn't work this way. RDF has a distinctively atomized sense of meaning, breaking complex claims down to triples. Sometimes this works well, sometimes (cf. the OWL design) even semantic web folks find it annoying and obtuse.
> 
> There are W3C languages like the (largely failed) GRDDL work, which map from non-RDF XML formats into RDF graphs. The creators of the pre-RDF instance data couldn't be accused of even knowing what RDF is, never mind being commited to its semantics. There are others like Turtle that are more obviously fully on board the RDF train.
> 
> The drafting around this WG seems to lean towards JSON-LD, where there is some perceived ambivalence towards aspects of RDF (hi Manu!:) 
> 
> Citing again http://manu.sporny.org/2014/json-ld-origins-2/ <http://manu.sporny.org/2014/json-ld-origins-2/>
> 
> "Kick RDF in the Nuts RDF is a shitty data model."
> "I personally wanted JSON-LD to be compatible with RDF, but that’s about it. You could convert JSON-LD to and from RDF and get something useful, but JSON-LD had a more sane data model where lists were a first-class construct, you had generalized graphs, and you could use JSON-LD using a simple library and standard JSON tooling. "
> 
> This is a legitimate point of view. JSON-LD is defined by its W3C specifications and to some extent by the pragmatics of how it is actually used, rather than the aggregate of the opinions of its creators and spec editors. But it shines a light on whether this WG is on board with what W3C claims RDF data structures mean, when considered to be sets of statements about the world.
> 
> Another example that crosses back into Phil's point here, is around unique identification in the face of bnodes using reference-by-description constructions. OWL provides a notion of inverse functional property, so that you can use property values as indirect identifiers. If the instance data is understood to be OWL written in RDF written in JSON-LD, readers of the claims could read some data as "the x whose foo is bar", e.g. 'the Language whose bcp47 code is "he".' The RDF layer doesn't provide the reading of this as saying 'the'; viewed purely as RDF triples it'd be more like saying "a Language whose bcp47 code is "he". And to Phil's point below, even the claim that the bcp47 property is owl:InverseFunctional would depend on actually having access to the (possibly evolving) remote schema. Not to mention knowing or caring what the associated OWL bits of it mean.
> 
> My point here isn't that W3C's problem is not just getting RDF-skeptics to approve or tolerate the group, but that even if you're on board with RDF, it's a slippery slope (or a majestic ascent) to things like OWL, which bring more expressivity to things which ultimately might be written in triples that are encoded in JSON and signed via bnode labelling.
> 
> Saying "it's RDF" and "it's signed" --- what does that mean in practice about the stuff being signed? Presumably something more than "it could be loaded into an RDF database". But what exactly? Is the atomicity of RDF graphs being a bunch of AND-ed independent statements part of the picture, but OWL not? (unless a bunch of OWL folks join the WG?). Or is the RDF-ness of the group purely "you could convert to and from RDF and get something useful"?
> 
> 
> 
> And I believe everyone else does to. That is, if I have a bunch of quads that use property ex:foo, but I don't control ex: then, clearly, there is a boundary on the integrity of what I have signed. How we tackle that will be for the WG to decide but my expectation is that signatures/proofs will be timestamped and the relying party will have to judge whether or not they trust the controllers of ex: sufficiently that my signature counts for anything. If ex: is under SDO-level change management, such as schema.org <http://schema.org/>, a vocab on w3.org <http://w3.org/> or, if you'll allow me, the GS1 Web Voc, the relying party may well trust it - but I agree, there needs to be some sort of explicit flag that says "this signature/proof was made at time/date X, any change outside this data since then may or may not render this meaningless but we trust those external parties sufficiently to sign this".
> 
> But we're talking hypothetically here. Let's try and think of a real world scenario. Suppose a manufacturer signs some data today that includes a triple like
> 
> <ex:Product> <gs1:allergenStatement> "Does not contain nuts".
> 
> https://www.gs1.org/voc/allergenStatement <https://www.gs1.org/voc/allergenStatement> rdfs:comment "Textual description of the presence or absence of allergens as governed by local rules and regulations, specified as one string."
> 
> 
> 
> That depends on a term in the GS1 Web Voc that, yes, I can change and the manufacturer can't. But I won't because we have a change management process that says we won't make any change without consultation with our community, and a general policy of not breaking stuff if we can help it
> 
> https://web.archive.org/web/20160718151441/https://www.gs1.org/voc/allergenStatement <https://web.archive.org/web/20160718151441/https://www.gs1.org/voc/allergenStatement> confirms it hasn't been changed yet. Not clear what "local rules and regulations" means, but it has always been so afaik.
>  
> The manufacturer, i.e. the signer, and the relying party can use their judgement on this. Therefore I suggest that in this business scenario, the signature/proof has meaning.
> 
> So now we need a counter example. OK, so the triple becomes
> 
> <ex:Product> <badActor:allergenStatement> "Does not contain nuts"
> 
> Here, a manufacturer (ex: ) has used the badActor:allergenStatement predicate. Two minutes after the manufacturer signs that statement, badActor changes it definitions to say "all values of this property are the inverse of the truth." What value does that signature/proof have then? No more and no less than it did. At the time we signed it, the statements were true.
> 
> Earlier in this thread I asked what the impact might be on schema maintainers - and you can imagine my check via archive.org <http://archive.org/> becoming more institutionalized through our community practices - e.g. facilitated at projects like LOV, or W3C or Internet Archive. But I won't go on about this as my original point was the one above about rdf-ness, not about the external dependencies aspect of signature semantics.
> 
> The issue isn't the naming of the WG, it's the expectations that can come with saying "this is RDF", and doing that before people start jumping on (post-pandemic) planes to fly around to WG meetings to discover their colleagues in the WG have radically different expectations...
> 
> Dan
> 
>  
> Here the signer has placed their trust in badActor:. That's probably a really dumb thing for them to have done and the relying party will need to assess whether *they* trust badActor and, by extension, the manufacturer.
> 
> This *is* an issue the WG will need to tackle. I can imagine that a signature/proof *may* have a placeholder where external dependencies are listed, for example - but we're way ahead of ourselves here and I cannot predict what others will deem a good idea.
> 
> As for signing individual statements, well, that's something we might want to talk to the RDF* folks about. I recall many lively conversations over the years about the immutability of RDF statements and whether all assertions exist with equal certainty until the heat death of the universe. Clearly they don't - hence RDF*.
> 
> I've talked a lot here about RDF, triples and quads. The proposed charter talks about RDF and Linked Data. The first mention of the term Linked Data (after the WG's title) links to https://www.w3.org/standards/semanticweb/data <https://www.w3.org/standards/semanticweb/data> that opens with:
> 
> "The Semantic Web is a Web of Data — of dates and titles and part numbers and chemical properties and any other data one might conceive of. The collection of Semantic Web technologies (RDF, OWL, SKOS, SPARQL, etc.) provides an environment where application can query that data, draw inferences using vocabularies, etc."
> 
> That's not shy about using the term RDF. The proposed WG's mission statement also cites RDF Dataset Canonicalization, concrete RDF syntaxes and more. For me, it's pretty clear that if you/your employer has antibodies against RDF - and we all know that many such people and organisations exist - then this WG is not for you.
> 
> But as I said last time in this thread, IMO the term Linked Data has evolved, at least in the way it's used in business-oriented discussions. In my work we talk about "Linksets", "links to other sources of data", and abuse the word "semantic" at every turn. I have a fortnightly meeting in my calendar called "Moving towards a GS1 Semantic". Colleagues create "data models" in Excel. I'm an atheist but I recite the serenity prayer daily [1].
> 
> The point being that Linked Data Signatures is well named. It clearly *is* in the RDF/Semantic Web camp, but it has elements in it that will allow us to talk about the work in a broader, less-technical, more business-focused environment. When I and one or two others talk about Linked Data at GS1 it's understood to mean decentralized data, the Web of data, silo-busting etc. We can use it with confidence. So Linked Data Integrity and Linked Data Security Vocabulary are terms that have meaning. Those audiences know and accept that there are important technical details that need to be addressed - that's the RDF bit.
> 
> Talk of RDF Dataset Canonicalization etc. will, inevitably, limit membership of the WG. But that's no different from any other WG. For example, my organisation has no interest in participating in WGs that define the Web as experienced in the browser, for example. So knock yourself out CSS WG, Pointer Events, SVG, Web Applications and all the others. We're glad you're there but we'll leave that stuff to you.
> 
> LD and RDF are both terms in common usage. Rightly or wrongly, we use them interchangeably. Maybe we should put (sic) after every mention of Linked Data? RDF c14n has been talked about since the early days of RDF when you were there and I wasn't. It's never been formalised. But as the acceptance and use of Linked Data as a concept has grown in areas like the one where I now work, and with the advent of Verifiable Credentials, we need this. Can we not worry so much about the naming of the thing? Please?
> 
> Phil
> 
> 
> [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Serenity_Prayer <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Serenity_Prayer>
> 
> 
> 
> Phil Archer
> Director, Web Solutions, GS1
> https://www.gs1.org <https://www.gs1.org/>
> 
> Meet GS1 Digital Link Developers at
> https://groups.google.com/forum/#!forum/gs1-digital-link-developers <https://groups.google.com/forum/#!forum/gs1-digital-link-developers>
> 
> https://philarcher.org <https://philarcher.org/>
> +44 (0)7887 767755 <tel:07887%20767755>
> @philarcher1
> Skype: philarcher
> 
> On 10 May 2021 19:38, Dan Brickley wrote:
> 
> On Mon, 10 May 2021 at 19:23, Ivan Herman <ivan@w3.org <mailto:ivan@w3.org> <mailto:ivan@w3.org <mailto:ivan@w3.org>> > wrote:
> 
>                 On 10 May 2021, at 18:58, Dan Brickley <Danbri@danbri.org <mailto:Danbri@danbri.org> <mailto:Danbri@danbri.org <mailto:Danbri@danbri.org>> > wrote:
> 
> 
> 
>                 
>                 Thanks for reworking the docs based on all of the giant discussions!
> 
>                 On naming and RDFness, nobody is against pragmatism. The problem is that everyone sees their own preferences as the most pragmatic.
> 
>                 As you describe it below, W3C here is skating dangerously close to saying that it is drafting this work in such a way as to mislead the management of its Member organizations to such an extent that staff would be assigned to the WG under false pretences, and that a more honestly described workplan would not garner support. Presumably this also applies to AC approval, since it is also the management of W3C member orgs being consulted.
> 
>                 The pragmatic view in my estimation (and potentially Google’s once we have discussed internally) is that it is better to have these things out in the open before the WG is spawned rather than bickered over expensively afterwards.
> 
>         Can you be more specific to understand what you would propose (taking also into account the constraints that I described below)?
> 
> 
> When you wrote "the practical reality is that we had feedbacks from people saying their management may not allow them to participate on the working group is it is perceived as being a pure RDF work", while also suggesting the scope is indeed very RDF oriented ("exchange and the integration of simple factual data expressed in RDF."), it feels like a contradiction best resolved in charter-drafting phase, rather than during the WG. Specifically if the WG is in fact very much focussed on doing things with RDF data, anyone (a) staffing it (b) approving the WG charter, ... ought to know that.
> 
> 
> My proposal is simple: not to pretend it's not RDF-centric when it is, because the pain will only be postponed.
> 
> 
> Dan
> 
> 
> 
> 
>                 Quick example to suggest this goes beyond mere naming:
> 
>                 If the content being signed claims in rdf that
> 
>                  entityuri1 has prop1 with val2;
>                  and prop2 with val3;
>                 and prop4 with val4...
> 
>                 RDF goes to extraordinary lengths to make these different triples independent. If you assert them all, you are hardpressed to say “hey it was all or nothing”. Whereas if you operating at the JSON level and sign this you could point at eg prop4 being “thisRecordTrueUntil” and val4 being “2021”.
> 
>                 We have barely touched on how the partial RDFness touches on meaning attached to signing, is there potential for mixed expectations here?
> 
> 
>         The "out of scope" list in the charter now includes:
> 
>         "Authenticity and trust issues of Web (Data) content that go beyond the exchange and the integration of simple factual data expressed in RDF."
> 
> 
>         (I guess you will recognize this text). In my view, this covers the situation that you describe. Is there anything specific that you could propose as an additional item in the list?
> 
>         In general, it would really be good at this point if we could discuss specific changes on the documents...
> 
>         Thanks
> 
>         Cheers,
> 
>         Ivan
> 
> 
> 
> 
>                 Dan
> 
>                 On Mon, 10 May 2021 at 15:08, Ivan Herman <ivan@w3.org <mailto:ivan@w3.org> <mailto:ivan@w3.org <mailto:ivan@w3.org>> > wrote:
> 
> 
>                         (This is not a direct reply on this specific message, but I was not sure on which message in the thread I should hook this:-)
> 
>                         Dear all,
> 
>                         thanks for all the discussions. We (ie, the the proposed co-chairs of the WG, the editors of some of the main input documents, etc) had a series of discussions and we have now an updated version of the charter and the explainer document:
> 
>                         https://w3c.github.io/lds-wg-charter/ <https://w3c.github.io/lds-wg-charter/>
>                         https://w3c.github.io/lds-wg-charter/explainer.html <https://w3c.github.io/lds-wg-charter/explainer.html>
> 
>                         we tried to answer to the concerns expressed on this thread by removing some unclear statements, adding some extra explanations to the explainer document, putting certain issues explicitly in the 'out-of-scope' sections, etc).
> 
>                         On the contentious issue of naming, ie, Linked Data vs. RDF, we have to be pragmatic on this. Theoretical purity may require to use only the term RDF; the practical reality is that we had feedbacks from people saying their management may not allow them to participate on the working group is it is perceived as being a pure RDF work but it is o.k. if the work is on Linked Data. We have to live with that, and have the naming issue discussed on another day. Nevertheless, we tried to come up with a slightly more detailed background un the explainer document (rather than the charter itself; there is a requirement, by the AC members of the W3C, to keep the charter as succinct as possible).
> 
>                         Thanks again for all the input,
> 
>                         Ivan
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
>                                 On 4 May 2021, at 17:55, Dan Brickley <danbri@google.com <mailto:danbri@google.com> <mailto:danbri@google.com <mailto:danbri@google.com>> > wrote:
> 
>                                 On Tue, 4 May 2021 at 15:40, Manu Sporny <msporny@digitalbazaar.com <mailto:msporny@digitalbazaar.com> <mailto:msporny@digitalbazaar.com <mailto:msporny@digitalbazaar.com>> > wrote:
>                                 >
>                                 > On 5/4/21 10:01 AM, Dan Brickley wrote:
>                                 > > For now I'd just add: let's not wait until the WG is chartered before
>                                 > > clarifying usecases - the lack of these may be why there's apparently
>                                 > > disagreement amongst the works primary advocates on what is in vs out of
>                                 > > scope.
>                                 >
>                                 > Dan, have you seen the current set of use cases?
>                                 >
>                                 > https://w3c.github.io/lds-wg-charter/explainer.html#usage <https://w3c.github.io/lds-wg-charter/explainer.html#usage>
> 
>                                 Yes. My concern in the original post was that:
> 
>                                 The charter opens as follows:
>                                 “ There are a variety of established use cases, such as Verifiable Credentials <https://www.w3.org/TR/vc-data-model <https://www.w3.org/TR/vc-data-model>> , the publication of biological and pharmaceutical data, consumption of mission critical RDF vocabularies, and others, that depend on the ability to verify the authenticity and integrity of the data being consumed (see the use cases <https://w3c.github.io/lds-wg-charter/explainer.html#usage <https://w3c.github.io/lds-wg-charter/explainer.html#usage>>  for more examples).”
>                                 Currently the charter only alludes wavily to a “variety of established use cases”, and cites its specific “use cases” for “more”.
> 
> 
>                                 ... i.e. those that you're pointing to are additional to presumed widely known usecases, ... they're "more", not the core.
> 
>                                 The first sentence of the charter grounds its importance in terms of "The deployment of Linked Data is increasing at a rapid pace.", and we understand from Ivan that this means the same as The deployment of RDF is increasing at a rapid pace". It links to http://webdatacommons.org/structureddata/#toc3 <http://webdatacommons.org/structureddata/#toc3> which is about "Microdata, RDFa, JSON-LD, and Microformat Data Sets", from public web crawl extractions by the webdatacommons team.
> 
> 
>                                 The charter talks about "Detecting changes in datasets" as a typical usecase. It would be good to tie that to any of the "increasing at a rapid pace" adoption reported in http://webdatacommons.org/structureddata/ <http://webdatacommons.org/structureddata/>.
> 
>                                 Consider that for the GS1-related / Product data usecases, Phil seems to see things differently from Manu.
> 
>                                 Phil: "Where I think I seem to have more sympathy than some with Dan's original commentary, is the issue of a fixed/signed dataset containing links to external sources of data and definitions that are not under the signee's control. That is, if my signed RDF dataset includes data expressed using schema:Product, and the definition of schema:Product changes, what value does my signature have now? This is an issue that I think the WG will need to address - that is, we'll need to set a boundary on what should and should not be inferred by the presence of whatever crypto doo-hickey surrounds the data. IMO, it seems clear that we cannot sign the meaning. ... And there's the irony. We can't sign the semantics in a Semantic Web dataset unless we also retrieve all externally-referenced sources and sign an immutable local copy of those as well (I'm really hoping no one thinks that's a good idea ☹ )"
> 
>                                 Manu: [responding to Dan saying]"> Are we convinced that there is application-level value in having assurances over instance data without also having them for the schemas and ontologies they are underpinned by?"
> 
>                                 Manu: Yes, I am. Much of the work in Verifiable Credentials utilize schemas that are cached client-side (usually permanently, and enforced by software). We don't need schemas to adopt the technology for it to be useful. It would be more useful if schema publishing used the technologies, but I don't think anyone is placing that as a MUST along this road (because there is no need to create a dependency there)."
> 
>                                 I am sympathetic to Manu's point that it might take years to see how signing plays out w.r.t. schemas and remote dependencies, and hopefully there is at least some usefulness in having some more building blocks for signed RDF in the meantime. Manu - do you have more pointers to the "schemas cached client-side" approach that's emerging? Is it documented anywhere?
> 
>                                 As Phil says, " if my signed RDF dataset includes data expressed using schema:Product, and the definition of schema:Product changes, what value does my signature have now?".
> 
>                                 Given that the schema speaks also of "the publication of biological and pharmaceutical data", it would be good to have an explicit usecase from that world, and to work through this issue in that domain. If schema caching and/or signing isn't a concern, that would be good to know. If there are emerging practices, that would also be good to know.  The most obvious topic here would be the application of Verifiable Claims to Covid-related "passports", with vaccination records etc. I understand VC is being used in that setting. Is VC for covid vaccination (etc.) blocked in any way by the absence of the proposed work items in this group? Can a usecase be articulated?
> 
> 
> 
>                                 >
>                                 > ------------------------
>                                 >
>                                 > Speaking as one of the Editors of the input specifiations... As a related
>                                 > aside, and at the risk of completely derailing this thread, it is possible to
>                                 > use the Linked Data Signatures specification to sign data payloads that are
>                                 > Linked Data but are not RDF.
> 
> 
>                                 Ivan wrote: "I would propose to agree that, for the purpose of this charter and WG, the terms RDF and Linked Data are interchangeable; this is certainly the way the WG intends to pursue its work."
> 
> 
>                                 I am glad we're having this conversation, because it is good to stabilize some terminology (at least in the purpose of this charter/WG, as Ivan says), rather than have the WG be launched on the basis of confusions.
> 
>                                 I am having a hard time imagining how "...that are Linked Data but are not RDF" and "the terms RDF and Linked Data are interchangeable" can be simultaneously true; could we walk through an example in the context of this charter?
> 
>                                 Ivan also wrote, "To further narrow down the discussion, let us also concentrate on what this charter proposes to do. It proposes to provide a standard for the canonicalization of, and to calculate a hash for, an RDF Graph or an RDF Dataset. (There are some additional, say, "engineering" issues like how to express the algorithms and their result in RDF, but that is, comparatively, minor.) That is it."
> 
> 
>                                 If the "Linked Data Signatures specification" is expected to create new W3C technology that is likely applicable outside of RDF, charter reviewers ought to know about it.
> 
>                                 Keeping the gap between the RDF world and everyone else as small as possible makes a lot of sense.
> 
>                                 The most obviously applicable "not an RDF file" artifact we could consider here is out-of-band JSON-LD context definition files. For example, editing Schema.org <http://Schema.org <http://schema.org/>> 's can cause an unchanged installation of Apache Jena to give different RDF output from byte-for-byte identical input.
> 
>                                 But there may also be use cases that are implementable without the RDF content being canonicalized, or with the canonicalization being at a different level of abstraction (e.g. RDFa-in-HTML content using HTML-level canonicalization). There may be important cases where the OWL level of abstraction is seen as important by some constituencies.
> 
> 
>                                 > The Linked Data Signatures signing algorithm consists of 4 phases:
>                                 >
>                                 > 1. Canonicalization of input data
>                                 > 2. Cryptographic hashing
>                                 > 3. Digitally signing
>                                 > 4. Expressing the signature
>                                 >
>                                 > RDF really only comes into play in steps #1 and #4... and it's possible for it
>                                 > to not come into play at all.
>                                 >
>                                 > For example, you can use JCS[1] to canonicalize in step #1, and simple
>                                 > key-values to express the signature in #4. Workday and Microsoft do this today
>                                 > with one of their Linked Data Cryptosuites.
>                                 >
>                                 > Now, do I think this is a good idea -- no, I'm not too keen on it; but
>                                 > enabling others to put forward alternatives based upon a standard is useful.
>                                 >
>                                 > Should the WG prioritize this aspect of Linked Data Signatures -- no, we
>                                 > should get the RDF bits right.
>                                 >
>                                 > This is why we chose the "Linked Data" moniker... because it's not entirely
>                                 > about RDF... we have folks that don't like RDF that do use JSON-LD (and seem
>                                 > to like it).
> 
>                                 Are the folks that don't like RDF expecting to join this WG that is according to Ivan, entirely devoted to RDF?
> 
> 
>                                        Saying that the output of the WG is *only* about RDF would
>                                 > alienate a significant part of that community... and it would also be
>                                 > technically incorrect.
>                                 >
>                                 > Now, all that said -- we should have a razor sharp focus on getting the RDF
>                                 > bits right, because that's what most of the supporters of the Charter need.
>                                 > Simultaneously, we shouldn't do anything to prevent these non-RDF (but still
>                                 > "Linked Data") use cases... and that's the concern w/ stripping all the
>                                 > "Linked Data" language out of the charter.
> 
> 
>                                 +1
> 
>                                 > It does feel like we're all on the same page here wrt. focus -- we don't want
>                                 > a perma-WG... we want something specific that's highly focused.
> 
>                                 Yup - totally agree.
> 
>                                 > Simultaneously, we don't want the future non-RDF stuff to suffer just because
>                                 > people were under the mistaken impression that Linked Data Signatures ONLY
>                                 > works for RDF inputs.
> 
> 
>                                 I am torn --- as an RDF technologist, absolutely I see value in having common infrastructure around bnode labeling. And that can be useful without any crypto whatsoever, e.g. as utility functions in software it would be handy. Mixed with crypto it absolutely is interesting, but is there perhaps a piece of work that might be harder because it engages with more groups, which pushes the non-RDF aspects of what's proposed here into a broader W3C space? How far can an RDF-agnostic "just sign the bits" approach be made to work for the usecases W3C cares most about?
> 
>                                 I remember you were keeping an eye on the debates around "Signed HTTP Exchanges" and Web Packaging, for example. Last I checked in there it wasn't clear there was consensus about browser-UI aspects, but maybe there could be some other common agendas worth exploring? https://github.com/w3c/strategy/issues/171#issuecomment-603280405 <https://github.com/w3c/strategy/issues/171#issuecomment-603280405> etc.
> 
>                                 cheers,
> 
>                                 Dan
> 
>                                 > -- manu
>                                 >
>                                 > [1]https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc8785 <https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc8785>
>                                 >
>                                 > --
>                                 > Manu Sporny - https://www.linkedin.com/in/manusporny/ <https://www.linkedin.com/in/manusporny/>
>                                 > Founder/CEO - Digital Bazaar, Inc.
>                                 > blog: Veres One Decentralized Identifier Blockchain Launches
>                                 > https://tinyurl.com/veres-one-launches <https://tinyurl.com/veres-one-launches>
>                                 >
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
>                         ----
>                         Ivan Herman, W3C
>                         Home: http://www.w3.org/People/Ivan/ <http://www.w3.org/People/Ivan/>
>                         mobile: +33 6 52 46 00 43 <tel:+33%206%2052%2046%2000%2043>
>                         ORCID ID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0782-2704 <https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0782-2704>
> 
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----
Ivan Herman, W3C 
Home: http://www.w3.org/People/Ivan/
mobile: +33 6 52 46 00 43
ORCID ID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0782-2704

Received on Tuesday, 11 May 2021 12:31:54 UTC