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Re: more politics


Re:  more politics
John Cowan wrote:

> It's not about what the resource is, but about what may be
> truthfully predicated about it.  Is it true to say that the size of
> "http://www.ibiblio.org/wm/paint/auth/vinci/joconde/joconde.jpg" is
> 743x1155 pixels, or is it true to say that it is 77x53 cm?  It can't
> be both.

There is broad consensus that it's a bad thing for there to be ambiguity 
about what a URI identifies.  It not only causes logical conundra, but 
intellectual-property problems, indexing breakage, and is generally bad. 
  I just have trouble believing that the ambiguity problem is going to 
be helped by asserting that URIs can't identify anything but information 
sources (fuzzily defined amid much hand-waving, and ignoring the many 
counter-examples, such as HTTP-controlled robots), or that more 
generally URIs identify this but can't identify that, for nearly any 
values of "this" and "that".  The only way to deal with the ambiguity 
problem is by fighting entropy the way we normally do, with the 
application of discipline and intelligence and organization.  Not by fiat.

I had held the hope that one of the things the Semantic Web would be 
good for would be to enable me to make useful machine-readable 
statements along the lines of "this resource is just a JPEG of my cute 
cat" and "this resource serves as a placeholder for the W3C in my KR 
system".  But Pat Hayes et al tell me I'm all wrong.  Oh well.

-- 
Cheers, Tim Bray
         (ongoing fragmented essay: http://www.tbray.org/ongoing/)



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