Le 25 juin 2009 à 17:37, Adrian Walker a écrit :
> Pat Hayes wrote, in connection with .htaccess problems
>
> ....Most Web users do not, and will not, write code...
which is right and not right depending on the context, the motivation,
etc, but we understand the essence of it.
> Perhaps a useful extension to TIMBL's recent paper [2] might be a
> list of such platforms, and other design approaches? (Tim does
> mention the Tabulator in passing).
There are two folds:
The technology itself as expressed in the workshop article [Digital Me
Management][1] which is an attempt at drafting what is wrong, weak,
not very helpful for managing one's own data.
And the policy itself as expressed in the document about [Data
Independence][2]. I started by creating a small framework to really
think about your data independence.
For example, there are Web services such as [Tumblr][3], which
proposes people to have their content public but not indexed in search
engines (adding a layer opacity to slow down the process of discovery,
long possible on that. I use the same policy for 3 years for my own
web site.)
So indeed tools can help you to define the granularity of sharing, but
it's just the beginning.
[1]:
http://www.la-grange.net/2009/02/01/digital-me-management[2]:
http://bit.ly/freedata[3]:
http://tumblr.com/--
Karl Dubost
Montréal, QC, Canada