Draft. This plan is still under development. Please send feedback to sandro@w3.org.
Latest version at: http://www.w3.org/2013/04/vocabs/
Old versions and diffs at: http://www.w3.org/2013/04/vocabs/Overview-history(version
history).
This is
Revision: 1.91.25 $ Date: 2013-04-25 00:41:522013-05-24 12:56:27 $
In order to promote the widespread interoperability of data, the W3C is beginning to offer a set of services to help people select, create, and maintain IRI vocabularies useful for creating reusable data. These vocabulary management services will build on existing W3C activities to create a sustainable community of people creating, maintaining, and using vocabularies for data sharing.
Effective data sharing requires people or systems to know how elements
in a dataset are supposed to be understood. For example, a csv file
can only be used by people who know what the column headings mean.
When software is written to collect and analyze data, its developers
need to understand these structural elements. When data is coming
from many different sources, the data producers have to agree on
structural elements (column names) or else the data consumers
willhave to learnanalyze and then write code for each different style.
One technique for addressing this problem is to use web addresses
(URLs, URIs, or more recently IRIs) as identifiers for elements of the
structure (eg column headings). This establishes a single
authoritative source of information about the identifier's meaning
— the web page — while still allowing everyone who can
create a website to create as many new identifiers as desired. It
also allows people to easily and unambiguously refer to the
identifiers, for example when recommending them to a colleague or
asking a question about the meaning.searching for datasets which provide particular data.
While this use of IRIs has been adopted in some technical
communities, there are several barriers remainto wider adoption:
Lack of vocabulary hosting. In practice, creating and maintaining a website for your identifiers can be difficult. Many organizations structure their website around marketing requirements, not this kind of technical work, and the people who need to create new vocabularies of IRIs have little immediate motivation for creating a public-facing site for their work. LackCost of collaboration. Creating a vocabulary of identifiers that will be suitable for a range of applications usually requires input from a range of people. Finding and organizing the people with expertise in the domain of the vocabulary is one challenge; finding people with expertise in creating vocabularies is another. The result is often vocabularies developed by one or two people and suited only for narrow audiences.
Maintaining a website. In practice, creating and maintaining a website for your identifiers can be difficult. Many organizations structure their website around marketing requirements, not this kind of technical work, and the people who need to create new vocabularies of IRIs have little immediate motivation for creating a public-facing site for their work.
Lack of market information. There is no definitive listing of vocabularies, so it can be hard to determine whether a vocabulary for a particular purpose might exist. Even when one or more candidate vocabularies are found, it can be hard to find out how suitable they are: who else is using them, what are the relative strengths and weaknesses of the design, what software exists to support them, etc.
With the growing world-wide demand for data interoperability, these barriers are becoming increasingly problematic. Fortunately, W3C is well-positioned to address these problems. The vocabulary services outlined below build on existing W3C services and strengths. These services will make it much easier for people to obtain high quality vocabularies and help create new ones; this in turn will promote data sharing, reuse, and interoperability.
In general, these services are inexpensive to provide and can be offered for free to the public. W3C may, however, decide to charge for certain services and/or limit their use to W3C members.
Summary: We will promote and clarifythe existing policyuse of giving www.w3.org/ns space to anyW3C group, includingCommunity
groups. The goal is to allow vocabularies usefulGroups for open data interchange to be hosted by W3C and maintained by thegathering people who care about them. Background The longstanding W3C policy has beeninterested in developing and maintaining
individual vocabularies, and we will encourage new and existing
cross-domain groups to give out namespaces upon request by anyhelp guide others in creating better
vocabularies.
W3C group. When the policy was created,has several different kinds of groups, including Community Groups could only(which
can be created by anyone with the approval of the W3C Advisory Committee (representing the W3C Membership),just four other interested people), and
every group includedWorking Groups
(which are created after a member ofreview process by the W3C staff. Since then, W3C has begun to support CommunityAdvisory
Committee). For creating or maintaining a vocabulary, Community
Groups are likely to be the preferred option, because of their lower
financial and Businessprocedural overhead.
One drawback to Community Groups , which can be quickly created,(in contrast to Working Groups) is
that without membership approval, and do not have ongoingW3C staff participation. The namespace policy was interpretedto include thesehelp guide them, their progress depends on
their leadership figuring out, on their own, how to make a new
standard vocabulary. To reduce this burden and draw in people to use
Community Groups, as long aswe are creating a guide
to developing vocabularies at W3C.
In order to further help people, particularly on the technical
aspects of the process, we will continue to support the "shortname" was basedWebSchemas
(public-vocabs@w3.org) group as a community of practitioners willing
to offer advice on vocabulary design. Although this group has so far
largely focused on vocabularies hosted at schema.org, its mission
covers all vocabularies. With help from the chair and schema.org, we
intend to promote this group more broadly as a source for vocabulary
technical reviews, coordination, and developing vocabulary design
expertise.
Other cross-domain groups may also be formed, following the normal
processes, such as to produce a vocabulary-design Best Practices
document. As explained below, we may also form a group name.to develop
vocabulary metadata suitable for helping people choose among available
vocabularies.
Summary: We will promote and clarify the existing policy of giving www.w3.org/ns space to any W3C group, including community groups. The goal is to allow vocabularies useful for open data interchange to be hosted by W3C and maintained by the people who care about them.
The longstanding W3C policy has been to give
out namespaces (web space for vocabularies) upon request by any W3C
group, including
Community Groups and Business Groups. In
practice, few groups have taken advantage of this policy. It is not
widely known, and the process for updating the namespace document (the
vocabulary website) is not specified. PlanWith this in mind, we intend to
publicize this service and streamline the namespace document publication
process.
Specifically: the chairs of W3C groups, including Community Groups,
will have access toa web form which allows themsimple way to reserve and update namespace documents. The form will ask for some metadata, like what decision process was useddocuments,
should they choose to have their vocabulary hosted by the group,W3C and request that themanaged
according to its policies. If they make use of this service, they
will be required to confirm having several facts, including:
When we publish the documents, we will add prominent notice of the
status (not being endorsed by W3C) along with instructions for how to
give feedback. At some point this interfacewe may be expanded toprovide software tools which
support group development of vocabularies.
It may also be extendedThis service provides both an easy-to-maintain vocabulary website
and an institutional commitment to cover namespace documents on domains other than w3.org,maintain that site as long as
people are willing to participate in orderW3C groups to allow vocabulariesdo the work. This
second feature — a strong persistence policy — is
essential to potentially become independent of W3C.some potential vocabulary Groups Summary:users, and we will re-purpose the public-vocabs@w3.org group into a general group of vocabulary-development experts, with a missioncontinue
exploring ways to helpmake it even stronger. Options include establishing
institutional backup relationships (what happens to w3.org if W3C
shuts down?) and allowing vocabularies to be hosted on other groups produce high-quality vocabularies. We will promote the use ofdomains
so they can be transferred if there is community Groups for coordination among the people interested in developing and maintaining individual vocabularies. Background @@@ public-vocabs created....; who areconsensus that the
experts...? Plan @@@ outreach? @@@ review sessions?work is better done away from W3C.
Summary: We will collect, maintain, and distribute
information about all available vocabularies, with the aim of helping
people identify and decide among alternatives. This will be an open
data application, freely interoperating with other suchrelated information
services thatservices.
Even though at present vocabularies are generally available free of
charge, one may exist. Background @@@ various ontology directories Plan @@@consider vocabulary adoption as a market, with
"consumers" trying to identify "products" and choose among them. From
this perspective, consumers in the current vocabulary market have
little information about available products and their features. This
is hardly surprising: there is little or no "advertising", there no
simple UIbusiness case for list, search, add, thumbs-up @@@ experiments"retailers" to attract and guide consumers,
and there is little available "product information" as might be
printed on a package.
The current market has had some "retailers" who have since gone away (schema.net), some promising newcomers (LOV), and some successful efforts in subdomains with available funding (BioPortal). We plan to improve the flow of information in this market in two complementary ways:
Vocabulary Directory Website. We will provide a "retail" website where people can maintain and search listings of vocabularies (wherever they are hosted), along with useful metadata ("product information"). Metadata may include simple endorsements ("like", "+1", star ratings) and more detailed information like reviews, the list of open/closed issues, and the list of public users/implementations.
Vocabulary Market Database. The directory will be an
open data synndication, usingapplication, making its internal data available for others
and consuming data feeds from others. People who have existing
standardsmetadata will be able to easily provide it to the directory, and
prototypingpeople will be able to create new onesinterfaces for exploring and
exploiting the data.
This will be a development project involving both developing software and developing metadata vocabularies. W3C staff effort will be partially supported by external funding, and we will work with volunteers/partners. The software will be open source and the vocabularies will, of course, make use of the vocabulary management services described above, using a Community Group and review by public-vocabs@w3.org.
Using an open data architecture for these services is important not
just as a validation and demonstration of the underlying technologies,
but because it keeps down the barriers to entry for everyone,
everywhere, trying to share data. Where necessary.a traditional closed
directory acts as a bottleneck, stifling new approaches and dissuading
people from participating because of uncertainties in how that
directory might be run, an open directory welcomes everyone to
participate. Everyone is free to list new vocabularies, add
information about vocabularies, and creat apps to help people find and
work with vocabularies. This openness and innovation is a hallmark of
shared data and will be a key benefit of this service.
Copyright© 2013 W3C ® (MIT , ERCIM , Keio), All Rights Reserved.
Date: 2013-04-25 00:41:522013-05-24 12:56:27 $