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Weblog:   Distributed Computing Economics and the Semantic Web
Subject:   What are the semantic web applications anyway?
Date:   2003-09-23 01:35:31
From:   anonymous2
I think you hit the nail on the head with your aside asking what are these semantic web applications. It's very difficult to build high level apis for an unknown application. I guess the point of the semantic web is that it provides the basis for many thousands of applications.


One other point. The decision whether to distibute the computation of the data assumes that both are equally accurate. But in an open system like the Internet, how do you know the answer to your question is correct if you don't look at the data?

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  • William Grosso photo Checking results
    2003-09-23 08:29:06  William Grosso | O'Reilly Author [Reply | View]

    Re: the second paragraph. You have the same question, in spades, for the data. Why trust the data? Whoever put it on the web undoubtedly had a reason for wanting to share the data; assuming that they're pure of heart and simply want to expand the world's knowledge pool is problematic.

    As far as computation goes... two thoughts spring to mind. The first is that SETI@Home and Popular Power had the same question-- how do you prevent cheating. They came up with two solutions: (1) occasionally send the task to multiple users and compare answers and (2) have time and length estimates, that you can use to doublecheck that the time and length claims made by your cpu source are accurate.

    The other thought is that it's often a lot easier to verify answers than come up with them. Mathematical proofs are an obvious case of this, but so are things like travel plans (and J2ME's new class verifier works on this principle).

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