On 09/06/2011, at 12:56 PM, Paul Murray wrote:
A URI is not a GUID. This:
Thus:
urn:uuid:A9F435E0-8ED7-46DD-BAB4-EA8E5BF41523
is a URI that - according to a w3c standard - corresponds to the 128-bit guid.
To make the semantic web "go" and work with the cool uris, each data source would need to declare that it's cool uri is "same as" the urn:uuid: form. If a third party pulls together an ontology that includes both of those data sources, then that is enough to identify those two cool uris as being same as each other.
If the result of this is that that third party gets semantic inconsistencies (for instance, the two different data sources declaring those objects to be of incompatible types), then so be it: the data sources treat the object identified by that guid in incompatible ways. This is something that must be resolved at the human level.
is a URI that - according to a w3c standard - corresponds to the 128-bit guid. This:
A correction: the RFC is not a w3c standard, as such. I think RFCs belong to the IETF.
If you have received this transmission in error please notify us immediately by return e-mail and delete all copies. If this e-mail or any attachments have been sent to you in error, that error does not constitute waiver of any confidentiality, privilege or copyright in respect of information in the e-mail or attachments.
Please consider the environment before printing this email.