Here’s what Stephen Downes has to say about the Semantic Web:

RSS is the semantic web. It is not the official semantic web as I said, it is not sanctioned by any standards body or organization whatsoever. But RSS is what has emerged as the de facto description of online content, used by more than four million sites already worldwide, used to describe not only resources, but people, places, objects, calendar entries, and in my way of thinking, learning resources and learning objects.

What makes RSS work is that it approaches search a lot more like Google and a lot less like the Federated search described above. Metadata moves freely about the internet, is aggregated not by one but by many sources, is recombined, and fed forward. RSS is now used to describe the content of blogs, and when aggregated, is the combining of blog posts into new and novel forms. Sites like Technorati and Bloglines, Popdex and Blog Digger are just exploring this potential. RSS is the new syntax, and the people using it have found a voice.

2 Comments »




  1. Semantic web is not a myth: it’s a future reality
    Semantic web is not a myth: it’s a future reality

    Comment by Fred On Something... — 19/3/2005 @ 10:56

  2. [...] Hmmm… Stephen Downes said so much ealier: he said RSS is the Semantic Web. Tim Bray would probably say that Atom is the Semantic Web. Who cares, the message is the same. If there is anything transforming the web right now, it has to do with blogging. [...]

    Pingback by Daniel Lemire’s blog » ongoing - Web 2.0 or Not? — 10/8/2005 @ 16:13

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