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The Semantic Web, sometimes known as Web 3.0 (not to be confused with Web3), is an extension of the World Wide Web through standards [1] set by the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C). The goal of the Semantic Web is to make Internet data machine-readable .
Semantic Web needs unique identification to allow provable manipulation with resources in the top layers. Unicode serves to represent and manipulate text in many languages. Semantic Web should also help to bridge documents in different human languages, so it should be able to represent them. XML is a markup language that enables creation of ...
The Social Semantic Web can be seen as a Web of collective knowledge systems, which are able to provide useful information based on human contributions and which get better as more people participate. [1] The Social Semantic Web combines technologies, strategies and methodologies from the Semantic Web, social software and the Web 2.0. [2]
A semantic web service, like conventional web services, is the server end of a client–server system for machine-to-machine interaction via the World Wide Web.Semantic services are a component of the semantic web because they use markup which makes data machine-readable in a detailed and sophisticated way (as compared with human-readable HTML which is usually not easily "understood" by ...
The Semantic Web: A new form of Web content that is meaningful to computers will unleash a revolution of new possibilities. Scientific American, May 2001. A.P. Sheth, C. Ramakrishnan. Semantic (Web) Technology In Action: Ontology Driven Information Systems For Search, Integration and Analysis. IEEE Data Engineering Bulletin, 2003.
The term Semantic Social Networks was coined independently by Stephen Downes [1] and Marco Neumann in 2004 to describe the application of Semantic Web technologies and online social networks.
The Web Ontology Language (OWL) is a family of knowledge representation languages for authoring ontologies.Ontologies are a formal way to describe taxonomies and classification networks, essentially defining the structure of knowledge for various domains: the nouns representing classes of objects and the verbs representing relations between the objects.
Since the introduction of the Semantic Web concept by Tim Berners-Lee in 1999, [2] there has been growing interest and application of the W3C (World Wide Web Consortium) standards to provide web-scale semantic data exchange, federation, and inferencing capabilities.