👓 The Semantic Web, Syllogism, and Worldview | Clay Shirky

Read The Semantic Web, Syllogism, and Worldview by Clay Shirky (shirky.com)
The W3C's Semantic Web project has been described in many ways over the last few years: an extension of the current web in which information is given well-defined meaning, a place where machines can analyze all the data on the Web, even a Web in which machine reasoning will be ubiquitous and devastatingly powerful. The problem with descriptions this general, however, is that they don't answer the obvious question: What is the Semantic Web good for? The simple answer is this: The Semantic Web is a machine for creating syllogisms. A syllogism is a form of logic, first described by Aristotle, where "...certain things being stated, something other than what is stated follows of necessity from their being so." [Organon]
Not sure I like the logic on his vampire example as the language is missing some simple subtlety in it’s definition.

👓 You’re Not Cool Enough For Micro.blog | Greg Morris

Read You’re Not Cool Enough For Micro.blog by Greg Morris (Greg Morris)
It’s become a bit of a running joke amongst my tech friends. A personal meme that I keep repeating the same sort of phase when questioned about a whole range of topics. Anything from GDPR to Social Media harassment my answer – micro.blog. Many people don’t understand. I’ve tried and failed t...
Micro.blog can certainly be many things to many people–possibly too many. In large part, what it is depends on what tools you’re bringing into it and how you’d like to use it.

It can be:

  • a web host
  • a Twitter replacement
  • a Twitter client that allows you to own your own data
  • a Instagram replacement
  • a microcasting platform
  • a full blogging platform
  • a new, well-curated community with a strong code of conduct
  • a customized feed reader for a new community
  • a syndication platform for one’s personal blog
  • a low barrier entryway to having your own IndieWeb-capable blog on your own domain.
  • a first class IndieWeb citizen with support for multiple types of posts, IndieAuth, Webmention, Micropub, and Microsub.

Because I already have my own domain, my own hosting, and my own website, I personally use it to syndicate my content into an interesting community of individuals which I’d like to engage. I use the main interface as a feed reader to see what others are up to and to communicate with them directly. My site supports Webmention so comments to my posts on micro.blog come right back to my site and provide me notifications there.

Perhaps micro.blog ought to make a chart for a variety of potential users to indicate what they would potentially be bringing with them and then have an indicator what they might use it for with those particular tools? Because of the arrays of technologies that micro.blog supports, it’s far from a simple  marketing problem, particularly to a non-technical crowd. You certainly can’t say it’s “just” a Twitter replacement because Twitter only supports a small fraction of what micro.blog is capable.

👓 What I Want in a Blog | Glenn 2.0

Read What I Want in a Blog (glenn.thedixons.net)
Just throwing out some thoughts on what I really want in a blog: Cross-device accessibility – compose, read, and manage from any device Decentralized – Easy, lightweight setup on my own server, or Raspberry Pi Federated – this provides: Discoverability – my feed shows up elsewhere, others ca...

👓 Giving Up On IndieWeb | Glenn 2.0

Read Giving Up On IndieWeb by Glenn DixonGlenn Dixon (glenn.thedixons.net)
(Further update:  webmentions are working!!!) (UPDATE: It’s now been a year since I first posted this. Just today I discovered a year-old blog post which mentioned this one, and an ensuing discussion. Of course I knew nothing of this because – well, I couldn’t get webmentions to work! I have ...

👓 RDFa vs microformats | Evan Prodromou

Read RDFa vs microformats by Evan Prodromou (evan.prodromou.name via web.archive.org)
I'm fascinated by the idea of including semantic markup in Plain Old XHTML pages, and I'm excited by recent developments in this area. But I'm also concerned about the growing discrepancy between the W3C's initiative, namely RDFa, and the more established but conversely less official microformats effort. I think that having competing standards efforts in this area is going to hurt the advancement of so-called small-s semantic Web technologies, which is going to be bad for everyone.
An interesting bit of web history…

👓 Metadata, Part 2: Microformats | Locked Down SEO

Read Metadata, Part 2: Microformats by John Locke (Lockedown Design & SEO)
Today, we’ll look at another widely used form of structured data markup, Microformats.
Interesting to see how others see and define these for themselves. This has a heavy bent toward SEO obviously.

👓 Why I Needed to Pull Back From Twitter | Maggie Haberman

Read Why I Needed to Pull Back From Twitter by Maggie Haberman (nytimes.com)
The viciousness, toxic partisan anger and intellectual dishonesty are at all-time highs.

👓 The Webmentions specification is a useful thing that does not have a chance to survive – fast-paced | rychlofky.cz

Read Webmentions specifikace je užitečná věc, která ale nemá šanci přežít (rychlofky)
Webmentions specifikace je užitečná věc, tedy pokud si budete číst optimistické Webmentions: Enabling Better Communication on the Internet a uvažovat jenom nad pozitivními efekty. Ten negativní zná…

👓 1.7 Million U.S. Facebook Users Will Pass Away in 2018 | The Digital Beyond

Read 1.7 Million U.S. Facebook Users Will Pass Away in 2018 by Evan Carroll (The Digital Beyond)
In 2010 my friends Nathan Lustig and Jesse Davis (founders of Entrustet, which was later acquired by SecureSafe) used data from Facebook and the Centers for Disease Control to estimate the number of Facebook users who would pass away in 2010. They updated these numbers in January 2011 and Nathan updated them again in June 2012. I picked up the task in January 2016 upon the request of a major news organization. Another recent media query prompted me to revisit these numbers and provide new ones for 2018.

👓 An ethical framework for the digital afterlife industry | Nature Human Behaviour

Read An ethical framework for the digital afterlife industry by Carl Öhman, Luciano Floridi (Nature Human Behaviour)
The web is increasingly inhabited by the remains of its departed users, a phenomenon that has given rise to a burgeoning digital afterlife industry. This industry requires a framework for dealing with its ethical implications. The regulatory conventions guiding archaeological exhibitions could provide the basis for such a framework.

Highlights, Quotes, Annotations, & Marginalia

four categories of firms:
(1) information management services,
(2) posthumous messaging services,
(3) online memorial services and
(4) ‘re-creation services’

…the online security company McAfee claims that the average Internet user puts a value of US$37,000 on their digital assets.

they all share an interest in monetizing death online, using digital remains as a means of making a profit.

For example, financially successful chat-bot services represent not just any version of the deceased, but rather the one that appeals most to consumers and that maximizes profit. The remains thus become a resource, a form of (fixed) capital in the DAI [Digital Afterlife Industry] economy.

To set the direction for a future ethical and regulatory debate, we suggest that digital remains should be seen as the remains of an informational human body, that is, not merely regarded as a chattel or an estate, but as something constitutive of one’s personhood. This is also in line with European Union legislation’s terminology regarding ‘data subjects’. Given this approach, the main ethical concern of the DAI emerges as a consequence of the commercially motivated manipulation of one’s informational corpse (that is, the digital remains of a data subject). This approach suggests we should seek inspiration from frameworks that regulate commercial usage of organic human remains. A good model is provided by archaeological and medical museums, which exhibit objects that, much like digital remains, are difficult to allocate to a specific owner and are displayed for the living to consume.

👓 Google, Facebook, Microsoft and Twitter unite to simplify data transfers | Engadget

Read Google, Facebook, Microsoft and Twitter unite to simplify data transfers (Engadget)
The open-source Data Transfer Project should make it easier to switch services.

👓 My IndieWeb story, Part 1: Jumping in the Deep End | Eddie Hinkle

Read My IndieWeb story, Part 1: Jumping in the Deep End by Eddie HinkleEddie Hinkle (eddiehinkle.com)
This is part 1 of at least a 4 part series about the IndieWeb and my involvement with it so far. I hope it presents both some technical aspects of the IndieWeb but more so introduces how the IndieWeb experience is personal and is shaped by each individual. Over the last year and a half I’ve worked...
An interesting history from Eddie. It’s always great to see people’s thought processes and documentation of how they ended up with the website they’ve got and where they’re headed with it.

Reminds me a little of Alan Levine’s recent Interview Your Domain piece.

🔖 CNS*2018 Workshop on Methods of Information Theory in Computational Neuroscience

Read Information Theory in Computational Neuroscience Workshop (CNS*2018) by Joseph Lizier (lizier.me)
Methods originally developed in Information Theory have found wide applicability in computational neuroscience. Beyond these original methods there is a need to develop novel tools and approaches that are driven by problems arising in neuroscience. A number of researchers in computational/systems neuroscience and in information/communication theory are investigating problems of information representation and processing. While the goals are often the same, these researchers bring different perspectives and points of view to a common set of neuroscience problems. Often they participate in different fora and their interaction is limited. The goal of the workshop is to bring some of these researchers together to discuss challenges posed by neuroscience and to exchange ideas and present their latest work. The workshop is targeted towards computational and systems neuroscientists with interest in methods of information theory as well as information/communication theorists with interest in neuroscience.

👓 Exclusive: Randi Zuckerberg responds to her brother’s Holocaust comments | CNN

Read Exclusive: Randi Zuckerberg responds to her brother's Holocaust comments (CNNMoney)
Randi Zuckerberg says, "I don't think living in a sterile, stepford-like online community where we simply press the delete button on the ugly reality of how people feel is helpful."