Per guidance from GLD WG 20 June 2013, removed 5 Star Linked Data definition to avoid confusion. Resolved to keep on chart with stars and use prose to explain enterprise use of LD not on the public Web.
--- a/glossary/index.html Thu Jun 20 09:57:23 2013 -0400
+++ b/glossary/index.html Thu Jun 20 11:12:04 2013 -0400
@@ -29,36 +29,15 @@
</section>
<section>
-<h4>5 Star Linked Data</h4>
+<h4>5 Star Linked Open Data</h4>
<p>
-5 Star Linked Data refers to an incremental framework for deploying data. Tim Berners-Lee, the inventor of the Web and initiator of the <a href="http://linkeddata.org" target="_blank">Linked Data project</a>, suggested a 5 star deployment scheme for Linked Data. The 5 Star Linked Data system is cumulative. Each additional star presumes the data meets the criteria of the previous step(s).
+5 Star Linked Open Data refers to an incremental framework for deploying data. Tim Berners-Lee, the inventor of the Web and initiator of the <a href="http://linkeddata.org" target="_blank">Linked Data project</a>, suggested a 5 star deployment scheme for Linked Open Data. The 5 Star Linked Data system is cumulative. Each additional star presumes the data meets the criteria of the previous step(s). 5 Star <a href="#linked-open-data">Linked Open Data</a> includes an <strong>Open License</strong> (expression of rights) and assumes publications on the public Web.
</p>
<p>
-5 Star Linked Data, without the word "open", implies that the data does not include an Open License (expression of rights) and does not imply publication on the public Web. Thus, enterprise data published in accordance with the following framework is 5 Star Linked Data rather than 5 Star Linked <strong>Open</strong> Data.
-</p>
-
-<p class="highlight">☆ <b>Publish data using Web techniques in any format (e.g., PDF, JPEG).</b>
-</p>
-
-<p class="highlight">☆☆ <b>Publish structured data using Web techniques in a machine-readable format (e.g., XML).</b>
-</p>
-
-<p class="highlight">☆☆☆ <b>Publish structured data using Web techniques in a documented, non-proprietary data format (e.g., CSV, KML)</b>.
+Organizations may elect to publish 5 Star Linked Data, without the word "open", implying that the data <strong>does not</strong> include an Open License (expression of rights) and does not imply publication on the public Web.
</p>
-<p class="highlight">☆☆☆☆ <b>Publish structured data as RDF (eg Turtle, RDFa, JSON-LD, SPARQL)</b>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="highlight">☆☆☆☆☆ <b>In your RDF, have the identifiers be links (URLs) to useful data sources</b>.
-</p>
-</section>
-
-
-<section>
-<h4>5 Star Linked Open Data</h4>
-<p>The following 5 Star <a href="#linked-open-data">Linked Open Data</a> definition builds on the above 5 Star Linked Data definition, however adds an <strong>Open License</strong> (expression of rights) and assumes publications on the public Web.
-
<p class="highlight">☆ <b>Publish data on the Web in any format (e.g., PDF, JPEG) accompanied by an explicit Open License (expression of rights).</b>
</p>
@@ -71,7 +50,7 @@
<p class="highlight">☆☆☆☆ <b>Publish structured data on the Web as RDF (eg Turtle, RDFa, JSON-LD, SPARQL)</b>
</p>
-<p class="highlight">☆☆☆☆☆ <b>In your RDF, have the identifiers be links (URLs) to useful external data sources</b>.
+<p class="highlight">☆☆☆☆☆ <b>In your RDF, have the identifiers be links (URLs) to useful data sources</b>.
</p>
</section>