Why do all this? I think that events are very clearly a kind of data
that wants to be free from silos - events do not exist to draw hits to
websites, unlike many other kinds of contents; events exist to draw
physical human presence. A particular application of event feeds I
have in mind is improving how charities can connect to volunteers.
Suppose someone has some free time and some interest - they are a
candidate to volunteer. But currently a person would have to check
many, many websites to find the events for every interesting
organization and all the major event aggregators to find matches - a
very time consuming process. So, many volunteers don't find
appropriate opportunities, and those volunteers are lost.
By syndicating events with appropriate markup, search engines can
intelligently parse them and then make the data searchable. Doing
this is quite easy, actually, once the data is available in a feed
with appropriate markup.
So I'm writing once again to the data portability group because I
think this effort (event feeds) shares some spirit with data
portability. I'm not promoting a new standard, just widespread
adoption of existing ones. So I'm writing to the group looking for
supporters (and maybe even some more influential people to feeds built
at their business, or get event feeds into the media).
I've registered a .org domain and set up a facebook group, and will
continue to do everything I can think of to promote this. If anyone
else thinks this is worthwhile and would like to work on it, or can
pursue building a feed with event markup at their business, I'd love
to hear about it.
Thank You,
Aerik Sylvan
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http://eventfeed.org - An Initiative Promoting Syndication of Events