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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 .
The Semantic Web is a collaborative movement led by international standards body the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C). [1] The standard promotes common data formats on the World Wide Web . By encouraging the inclusion of semantic content in web pages , the Semantic Web aims at converting the current web, dominated by unstructured and semi ...
The World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) created the Web-Ontology Working Group as part of their Semantic Web Activity. It began work on November 1, 2001 with co-chairs James Hendler and Guus Schreiber. [22] The first working drafts of the abstract syntax, reference and synopsis were published in July 2002. [22]
This mechanism for describing resources is a major component in the W3C's Semantic Web activity: an evolutionary stage of the World Wide Web in which automated software can store, exchange, and use machine-readable information distributed throughout the Web, in turn enabling users to deal with the information with greater efficiency and certainty.
[3] [4] It was made a standard by the RDF Data Access Working Group (DAWG) of the World Wide Web Consortium, and is recognized as one of the key technologies of the semantic web. On 15 January 2008, SPARQL 1.0 was acknowledged by W3C as an official recommendation, [5] [6] and SPARQL 1.1 in March, 2013. [7]
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 Deployment Working Group, [14] chartered for two years (May 2006 – April 2008), put in its charter to push SKOS forward on the W3C Recommendation track. The roadmap projected SKOS as a Candidate Recommendation by the end of 2007, and as a Proposed Recommendation in the first quarter of 2008.
SWRL: A Semantic Web Rule Language Combining OWL and RuleML, W3C Member Submission 21 May 2004 A Proposal for a SWRL Extension towards First-Order Logic , W3C Member Submission 11 April 2005 OWL Web Ontology Language XML Presentation Syntax , W3C Note 11 June 2003