- From: Manu Sporny <msporny@digitalbazaar.com>
- Date: Mon, 11 Jul 2011 10:31:44 -0400
- To: W3C TAG <www-tag@w3.org>
bcc: HTML WG, RDF Web Apps WG This is an e-mail response from the RDF Web Applications Working Group to the Technical Architecture Group at the W3C regarding a recent concern[1] that was brought to our attention. We have already submitted a list of people[2] that we believe should be a part of the RDFa/Microdata Task Force. Additionally, we have had a discussion[3] in the group about the intended purpose and goals of the Task Force. In general, the group believes that a unified approach to structured data on the Web will reduce confusion in the marketplace and thus accelerate the growth of Linked Data and the Semantic Web. The group also thinks that the effort will be fruitless without broad participation and implementation of the Task Force's findings. The rest of this e-mail covers the concerns that the RDF Web Applications Working Group has regarding the new Task Force and attempts to provide guidance for addressing each concern. CONCERN: Multiple specifications for the same task During the TAG discussion, Larry Masinter produced a question that is at the heart of the issue. "Does anyone want there to be more than one structured data syntax published by W3C that accomplishes the same task?" In hindsight, it was a mistake for the HTML WG to allow the publication of two specifications that accomplish effectively the same task (from the viewpoint of the public). It is natural that nobody wanted to block the work of others - but since that hard decision was not made, and since some very large companies are attempting to make that decision for their customers, it is creating a great deal of confusion in the marketplace. We recommend that the question that Larry asked is required to be answered by the Task Force. CONCERN: Scope of structured data in HTML not clearly defined What are the goals of the structured data in HTML work? Is it to support the RDF data model? Support some other Microdata-like data model? Support all of the use cases identified? Only support use cases that are "mainstream" for Web developers? Provide a browser API and unified view of structured data on the web? How much complexity should be exposed to a beginner of structured data? If there is to be a unified path forward for structured data on the Web, it is important to understand which use cases we're supporting and which ones we're leaving behind. We recommend that the Task Force identify a clear set of goals and use cases that are to be supported by the structured data in HTML work. The questions above are provided as suggested discussion points. CONCERN: Consensus on "No Change" There is a concern that the group will be provided with very difficult decisions and instead of wanting to make a hard decision, they will resolve to not change anything. This will be viewed as a failure of the group. This issue is an opportunity for the W3C to demonstrate that the organization is capable of finding consensus and driving positive change among a broad constituency. We recommend that a "no change" result should not be an option for the Task Force. CONCERN: Key implementers will choose to not be involved. It is vital that companies that have deployed, or intend to deploy, structured data are active participants in the Task Force. This includes having the right set of people there as well as ensuring that they are committed to the work of the group. The XForms/WebForms and XML/HTML Task Forces largely failed in their mandate due to inactivity by major participants. We recommend that personnel from relevant companies are involved and that those personnel have decision making power to enact change in their organizations related to the Task Force findings. CONCERN: Agreement followed by inaction It could be that there is agreement among the Task Force participants to do something, but there is no follow-through. Solid commitments should be made and the Task Force should follow-up to report on progress regarding those commitments. Perhaps the HyperText Coordination Group should play a part in this work. We recommend that the Task Force gather commitments to enact change at the end of the discussion phase and then follow-up and report on progress regarding the commitments. CONCERN: Slow creation of Task Force The HTML WG expects Last Call to end in early August for the HTML+RDFa and HTML+Microdata specs. Similarly, the RDF Web Apps WG was one week away from entering Candidate Recommendation with RDFa 1.1. It is questionable whether or not the Task Force will be able to be formed in the near future. The announcement of this Task Force has effectively placed a hold on work in both Working Groups. There is concern that work that is done over the next 3 (or more) months will be invalidated by the Task Force or by a formal objection by the TAG. The note by the TAG is effecting both Working Group time lines. It is imperative that the Task Force is put together quickly and performs its work in an expedient manner, or is dissolved and another path forward is chosen. It is vital that the TAG and both Domain Leads step forward and take responsibility for the efficient creation and management of this Task Force. That is, it seems that neither the RDF Web Apps WG nor the HTML WG thinks it is their job to create or manage this Task Force. Since the original note came from the TAG, the ball is in your court. We recommend that the creation of the Task Force is made to be a priority of the TAG, Domain Leads, and the Director. CONCERN: TAG Note is not actionable There is concern in the HTML WG and the RDF Web Apps WG that the note provided by the TAG is not actionable[4] without further information from the TAG (formal objection or bug reports) or Task Force (findings turned into bug reports). The result is that the Working Groups must either ignore the TAG note until the Task Force has completed their work, or halt their work until the Task Force has completed their work. We recommend that the TAG submit a formal objection containing technical issues for both specifications, or that the TAG submits a series of bugs for both HTML+RDFa and HTML+Microdata in addition to RDFa Core 1.1 in the RDF Web Apps WG. -- manu, on behalf of the RDF Web Applications Working Group [1] http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/public-rdfa-wg/2011Jun/0058.html [2] http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/www-tag/2011Jul/0011.html [3] http://www.w3.org/2010/02/rdfa/meetings/2011-06-30#Official_Position_on_WWW__2d_TAG_issue [4] http://www.w3.org/2011/06/30-html-wg-minutes.html#item09 -- Manu Sporny (skype: msporny, twitter: manusporny) President/CEO - Digital Bazaar, Inc. blog: PaySwarm Developer Tools and Demo Released http://digitalbazaar.com/2011/05/05/payswarm-sandbox/
Received on Monday, 11 July 2011 14:32:10 UTC