Skip to main content

Home/ DataPortability/ Group items tagged conference

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Trent Adams

Chris Saad on DataPortability at The Next Web Conference in Amsterdam - 0 views

  •  
    Transcript of Chris Saad's discussion at The Next Web conference (provided by MrTopf)
Trent Adams

Conference Sessions by Day - 0 views

  • The business risks for Web 3.0 are fundamentally changing with increased public scrutiny of data privacy, portability, expanded Web Services, data sharing, cloud computing, etc. New privacy laws, new technological capabilities, and new user demands have created a situation where the question most frequently cited by students of Web 3.0 implementations have asked: we understand how beneficial it is to link data and derive new improved services, knowledge about our users/customers but what about privacy, regulation from the consumer perspective?
  • Key questions are discussed: who owns user data? How should users be able to reuse it? Why should companies consider allowing their users' personal data to be easily transportable? The answer here is: because in the end it will bring our users/customers closer, a finding many major enterprises have realized: Nokia, etc.
Trent Adams

Understanding the Basics of Personal Data: Vendors, Users, and You: Web 2.0 Expo New Yo... - 0 views

shared by Trent Adams on 14 Aug 08 - Cached
  • This session will provide an overview of the basics behind Data Portability, discussing some of the principles associated with it, how the social networking vendors are addressing it, and what you should be aware of as you consider providing or utilizing some of the newest standards that enable Data Portability.
Trent Adams

Microformats gain Yahoo's support: New opps for e-publishers-and the P side, too - 0 views

  • TeleBlog regular Branko Collin gave a nice explanation of how microformats could aid pickups of information from book reviews for Technorati. Josh Gay of the Free Software Foundation, whom I met Friday at a library conference in NYC, has also been a big booster of the concept. I  can see why. As described by Wikipedia, “any page created, or any content added to microformats is placed into the public domain for maximum possible reuse.”
  • That sounds anti-commerce. But actually microformats could help even commercial sites by, say, bringing more traffic to a book review magazine than it would receive otherwise. Theoretically Yahoo could create a page listing reviews for a certain book and automatically pick up ratings from each publication’s writeup. Such a capability, in turn, might just drive you to visit the sites and see how the reviewers justified the rating. What’s more, other sites could ride Yahoo’s coattails and reproduce the Yahoo page.
Trent Adams

Yahoo to Begin Indexing Microformats [SearchEngineWatch] - 0 views

  • Search Monkey will be the first use of structured data by Yahoo, but they could potentially be used to affect other parts of the search results or ranking algorithms in the future, according to Kumar. Yahoo will provide more details at an upcoming developer conference it's planning in the coming weeks.
Trent Adams

DataPortability: the portability of data - 0 views

  • First things first. DataPortability is a brand… its a kind of un-organisation (a bit like BarCamps are un-conferences); a group of people and organisations who have the same philosophy, a philosophy of the portability of data. Every member of DataPortability should push for (advocate/evangelise) portability of data to web-users, developers and organisations.
  • The DataPortability Project will support other projects/groups working towards data portability (at the moment this explicitly includes communities involved in OpenID, OAuth, Microformats and the Semantic Web). Some members of DataPortability are also involved with legal issues and privacy which are just as important as the portability of data. The DataPortability Project is there to support people into a Web of Data.
  • Portability of data, or data portability is portable data. In other words, data can be copy/pasted and/or moved from one location to another. This is dependent on accessibility.
Christian Scholz

BIS 2009 - CFP: 3rd Workshop on Social Aspects of the Web (SAW 2009) - 0 views

  • The change also raises a strong need for theoretical, empirical and applied studies related to how people may interact on the Web, how they actually do so, and what new possibilities and challenges are emerging in the social, business and technology dimensions.
Christian Scholz

CCC Events Weblog » Blog Archive » 25C3: Nothing to hide - 0 views

1 - 9 of 9
Showing 20 items per page