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Re: [xml-dev] Does high quality data contain traceabilityinformation?
- From: "Liam R. E. Quin" <liam@fromoldbooks.org>
- To: Roger L Costello <costello@mitre.org>, "xml-dev@lists.xml.org" <xml-dev@lists.xml.org>
- Date: Thu, 11 May 2023 15:09:08 -0400
On Thu, 2023-05-11 at 18:18 +0000, Roger L Costello wrote:
> Hi Folks,
>
> Traceability = who/what is the source of the data.
>
> Do you put traceability information in your XML documents?
Traceability and (closely related) provenance, are essential in a lot
of environments and contexts, and can be catastrophic if omitted.
Of course, in every-day discourse, on social media and in email, it
would be very useful for sources to be checked. Imagine if it was a
normal and reasonable expectation that when you saw a quote you could
touch it / click on it and find out where it came from. What effect
might that have on rumours and the lies that so often fuel conspiracy
theories?
>
> Consider this XML document about a runway at an airport in Jamaica:
>
> <airport>
> <name>NORMAN MANLEY INTL</name>
> <runway>
> <runwayLength>08909</runwayLength>
> </runway>
> </airport>
>
Here's my corrected version:
<airport>
> <name>NORMAN MANLEY INTL</name>
> <runway>
> <runwayLength>18909</runwayLength>
> </runway>
> </airport>
Which do you trust? Why?
Whenever data is aggregated, tracking sources may be necessary.
This is partly why i believe RDF has been actively harmful: it makes it
harder to track than not to track where "facts" came from, and to have
that information survive querying.
liam
--
Liam Quin, https://www.delightfulcomputing.com/
Available for XML/Document/Information Architecture/XSLT/
XSL/XQuery/Web/Text Processing/A11Y training, work & consulting.
Barefoot Web-slave, antique illustrations: http://www.fromoldbooks.org
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