--- a/bp/index.html Wed Nov 20 19:21:14 2013 +0100
+++ b/bp/index.html Wed Nov 20 19:25:29 2013 +0100
@@ -93,7 +93,7 @@
, href: "http://www.w3.org/2003/01/geo/"
, authors: [
"Dan Brickley"
- "Tim Berners-Lee"
+ , "Tim Berners-Lee"
]
, publisher: "W3C"
},
@@ -101,14 +101,14 @@
"howto-lodp": {
title: "How to Publish Linked Data on the Web" ,
href: "http://linkeddata.org/docs/how-to-publish",
- authors: ["Christian Bizer", " Richard Cyganiak", "Tom Heath"]
+ authors: ["Christian Bizer", " Richard Cyganiak", "Tom Heath"] ,
publisher: "Community Tutorial 17 July 2008"
} ,
"bp-pub": {
title: "Best Practice Recipes for Publishing RDF Vocabularies",
href:"http://www.w3.org/TR/swbp-vocab-pub/",
- authors: ["Diego Berrueta", "Jon Phipps"]
+ authors: ["Diego Berrueta", "Jon Phipps"] ,
publisher: "W3C",
status: "WG-NOTE"
}
@@ -631,7 +631,7 @@
<p>The Web makes use of the URI (Uniform Resource Identifiers) as a single global identification system. The global scope of URIs promotes large-scale "network effects". Therefore, in order to benefit from the value of LD, government and governmental agencies need to identify their resources using URIs. This section provides a set of general principles aimed at helping government stakeholders to define and manage URIs for their resources.</p>
<p class="highlight"><b>Use HTTP URIs</b><br>
-What it means: To benefit from and increase the value of the World Wide Web, governments and agencies SHOULD provide HTTP URIs as identifiers for their resources. There are many benefits to participating in the existing network of URIs, including linking, caching, and indexing by search engines. As stated in [[!howto-lodp]], HTTP URIs enable people to "look-up" or "dereference" a URI in order to access a representation of the resource identified by that URI.
+What it means: To benefit from and increase the value of the World Wide Web, governments and agencies SHOULD provide HTTP URIs as identifiers for their resources. There are many benefits to participating in the existing network of URIs, including linking, caching, and indexing by search engines. As stated in [[howto-lodp]], HTTP URIs enable people to "look-up" or "dereference" a URI in order to access a representation of the resource identified by that URI.
To benefit from and increase the value of the World Wide Web, data publishers SHOULD provide URIs as identifiers for their resources.
</p>