Data Integration and Transparency

Tim Berners-Lee

Director, World Wide Web Consortium;
MIT CSAIL and Southampton ECS
Web Science Research Initiative

This talk

Unexpected Re-use

The added value from sharing on the web

How to plan for the unexpected?

Sharing data

Data mixing: Term by term

dc:titleData Integration and Transparency
cc:license <http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/>
dc:creator
foaf:nameTim Berners-Lee
foaf:homepage<http://ww.w3.org/People/Berners-Lee>
foaf:email<mailto:[email protected]>
tk:event
dt:start2007-06-12T09:00
dt:end2007-06-12T10:00
dt:summaryW3C-WSRI eGovernment workshop
geo:lat38.9
geo:long-77
tk:slides<http://www.w3.org/2007/Talks/0618-egov-tbl>
tim:slideCount12

One item may involve data from many ontologies

The tradeoff

LocalWider
Local reuse onlyWider reuse
Local termsGlobal or shared terms
FastTakes effort

Semantic Web optimizes the tradeoff

Data owners should

  1. Take inventory
  2. Decide priorities, most likely benefits
  3. Look for existing ontologies
  4. Don't change the way data is managed
  5. Set up standard (RDF, SPARQL) portals onto existing data
  6. Where necessary, adapt or write new ontology bits

Forms of openness

Linking out

Incentive: kudos

Limitations of access control

Track provenance of data

Most semantic web processing systems are aware of provenance

Conclusion