David Recordon listed a few already in a previous mail. I added a few,
and I'm pretty sure I have forgotten many of them (in fact it's quite
amazing to see the landscape around identity management and social
networks). Some have overlaps or address slightly different goals.
Do we have a one liner description for each of them? For example, both
wikipedia and the opensocial fails to explain what it is about in the
first paragraph.
# Activity Streams
an extension to the Atom feed format to express what people are
doing around web
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Activity_Streams
http://activitystrea.ms/
# APML
APML allows users to share their own personal Attention Profile in
much the same way that OPML allows the exchange of reading lists
between News Readers.
http://apml.areyoupayingattention.com/
# Bandit
open source collection of loosely-coupled components to provide
consistent identity services.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bandit_project
http://www.bandit-project.org/
# Data Independence And Survival Best Practices
How to better share your data by promoting reusability, standards
and clear policies.
http://bit.ly/freedata
# DataPortability
Data portability is the ability for people to reuse their data
across interoperable applications. The DataPortability Project works
to advance this vision by identifying, contextualizing and promoting
efforts in the space.
http://www.dataportability.org/
# DigitalMe
DigitalMe is a set of components that enable users and applications
to interact with InfoCard-compatible web sites and services.
http://code.bandit-project.org/trac/wiki/DigitalMe
# DISO
DiSo (dee • soh) is an initiative to facilitate the creation of
open, non-proprietary and interoperable building blocks for the
decentralized social web.
http://diso-project.org/
# DOAP
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Description_of_a_Project
http://trac.usefulinc.com/doap
Description of a Project (DOAP) is an RDF schema and XML vocabulary
to describe open-source projects.
# FOAF
FOAF (an acronym of Friend of a friend) is a machine-readable
ontology describing persons, their activities and their relations to
other people and objects.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FOAF_%28software%29
http://www.foaf-project.org/
# FOAF+SSL
http://esw.w3.org/topic/foaf+ssl
FOAF+SSL is a authentication and authorization protocol that links
a Web ID to a public key, thereby enabling a global, decentralized/
distributed, and open yet secure social network.
# HCARD
hCard is a microformat for publishing the contact details (which
might be no more than the name) of people, companies, organizations,
and places, in (X)HTML, Atom, RSS, or arbitrary XML.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HCard
http://microformats.org/wiki/hcard
# Higgings
Higgins is a browser add-on that helps you log in to websites and
apps, manage your digital identities, and control the sharing of your
personal information.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Higgins_project
http://eclipse.org/higgins/
# Information Card
Information Card metaphor as a key component of an open,
interoperable, royalty-free, user-centric identity layer spanning both
the enterprise and the Internet.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Information_Card_Foundation
http://informationcard.net/
# OpenID
OpenID is an open, decentralized standard for authenticating users
which can be used for access control, allowing users to log on to
different services with the same digital identity where these services
trust the authentication body.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OpenID
http://openid.net/
# OpenSocial
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OpenSocial (btw poor wikipage on the
topic)
http://www.opensocial.org/
* general JavaScript API
* People and Friends API (people and relationship information)
* Activities API (publishing and accessing user activity information)
* Persistence API (simple key-value pair data for server-free
stateful applications)
# OAuth
OAuth is an open protocol to allow secure API authorization in a
standard method for desktop, mobile and web applications.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OAuth
http://oauth.net/
# Portable Contacts API
Providing users a secure way to access their address books and
friends lists without having to take their credentials or scrape their
data.
http://portablecontacts.net/
# SAML
Security Assertion Markup Language (SAML) is an XML-based standard
for exchanging authentication and authorization data between security
domains, that is, between an identity provider (a producer of
assertions) and a service provider (a consumer of assertions).
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SAML
http://saml.xml.org/
# SIOC - Semantically-Interlinked Online Communities
SIOC provides methods for interconnecting discussion methods such
as blogs, forums and mailing lists to each other.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Semantically-Interlinked_Online_Communities
http://sioc-project.org/
# Social Web incubator group
understand the systems and technologies that permit the description
and identification of people, groups, organizations, and user-
generated content in extensible and privacy-respecting ways.
http://www.w3.org/2005/Incubator/socialweb/wiki/Main_Page
# VCARD RDF
Resource Description Framework (RDF) encoding of the vCard profile
defined by RFC 2426 and to provide equivalent functionality to its
standard format.
http://www.w3.org/TR/vcard-rdf
# XFN
XHTML Friends Network (XFN) is an HTML microformat that provides a
simple way to represent human relationships using links.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/XHTML_Friends_Network
http://gmpg.org/xfn/
Some of the missing pieces of technology around sharing data and
access control in the realm of personal Web site as a social network
node.
http://www.w3.org/2008/09/msnws/papers/olivier-karl
--
Karl Dubost
Montréal, QC, Canada
http://twitter.com/karlpro
Great list. Will this be going up on the OWF website?
The Open Web Foundation is not designed right now to promote specific
specification efforts.
Where does the LoginUX initiative fit in with these things (if at all)?
http://kantarainitiative.org/confluence/display/ulx/Charter
On Wed, Oct 21, 2009 at 6:21 AM, Karl Dubost <ka...@la-grange.net> wrote:
> # Activity Streams
> # APML
> # Bandit
> # Data Independence And Survival Best Practices
> # DataPortability
> # DigitalMe
> # DISO
> # DOAP
> # FOAF
> # FOAF+SSL
> # HCARD
> # Higgings
> # Information Card
> # OpenID
> # OpenSocial
> # OAuth
> # Portable Contacts API
> # SAML
> # SIOC - Semantically-Interlinked Online Communities
> # Social Web incubator group
> # VCARD RDF
> # XFN
--
Christian Crumlish
Please buy my book, read it, love it, and review it on Amazon:
http://designingsocialinterfaces.com
It's called Designing Social Interfaces. Thank you!
Actually it has a duty to butt out of any such decisions.
Wheels will and should get reinvented and it is the job of the people with existing efforts to show value and accommodate the needs of new communities. Communities have their own personalities and their own way of working. There are many good reasons to have different groups work on competing efforts. At the same time, communication is critical and sharing ideas and experiences will help both sides. But no one gets a monopoly over a space just because they started first. There are plenty of awful specs and stupid solutions out there.
We are also completely unequipped to make such decisions or even recommendations.
EHL
Has there been any contact or attempt at coordination, or are the
efforts going off on cross-purposes, willfully?
-x-
Eran Hammer-Lahav suggested:
> Actually it has a duty to butt out of any such decisions.
How can OWF help individuals and companies to make their own decisions? Perhaps we have a duty to collect information about specifications available under our license(s) and publicize that on our website? Perhaps we have a duty to categorize them, and even to include public signed reviews of their adequacy?
I guess I'm not so ready as Eran is to give away a duty that the community might find useful, so long as it doesn't involve people like me laying down some law about quality or appearing to make a lot of technical or legal decisions on behalf of other people.
/Larry