Friend of a friend | |
Abbreviation | FOAF |
---|---|
Status | Published |
Year started | 2000 |
First published | June 3, 2005 |
Latest version | 0.99 January 14, 2014 |
Series | Namespace Document |
Authors | Dan Brickley, Libby Miller |
Base standards | RDF, OWL |
Domain | Semantic Web |
License | CC BY 1.0 |
Website | xmlns |
FOAF (an acronym of friend of a friend) is a machine-readable ontology describing persons, their activities and their relations to other people and objects. Anyone can use FOAF to describe themselves. FOAF allows groups of people to describe social networks without the need for a centralised database.
FOAF is a descriptive vocabulary expressed using the Resource Description Framework (RDF) and the Web Ontology Language (OWL). Computers may use these FOAF profiles to find, for example, all people living in Europe, or to list all people both you and a friend of yours know.[1][2] This is accomplished by defining relationships between people. Each profile has a unique identifier (such as the person's e-mail addresses, international telephone number, Facebook account name, a Jabber ID, or a URI of the homepage or weblog of the person), which is used when defining these relationships.
The FOAF project, which defines and extends the vocabulary of a FOAF profile, was started in 2000 by Libby Miller and Dan Brickley. It can be considered the first Social Semantic Web application, in that it combines RDF technology with 'social web' concerns.
Tim Berners-Lee, in a 2007 essay,[3] redefined the semantic web concept into the Giant Global Graph (GGG), where relationships transcend networks and documents. He considers the GGG to be on equal ground with the Internet and the World Wide Web, stating that "I express my network in a FOAF file, and that is a start of the revolution."
WebID
FOAF is one of the key components of the WebID specifications, in particular for the WebID+TLS protocol, which was formerly known as FOAF+SSL.
Deployment
Although it is a relatively simple use-case and standard, FOAF has had limited adoption on the web. For example, the Live Journal and DeadJournal blogging sites support FOAF profiles for all their members,[4] My Opera community supported FOAF profiles for members as well as groups. FOAF support is present on Identi.ca, FriendFeed, WordPress and TypePad services.[5]
Yandex blog search platform supports search over FOAF profile information.[6] Prominent client-side FOAF support was available in Safari[7] web browser before RSS support was removed in Safari 6 and in the Semantic Radar[8] plugin for Firefox browser. Semantic MediaWiki, the semantic annotation and linked data extension of MediaWiki supports mapping properties to external ontologies, including FOAF which is enabled by default.
There are also modules or plugins to support FOAF profiles or FOAF+SSL authorization for programming languages,[9][10] as well as for content management systems.[11]
Example
The following FOAF profile (written in Turtle format) states that James Wales is the name of the person described here. His e-mail address, homepage and depiction are web resources, which means that each can be described using RDF as well. He has Wikimedia as an interest, and knows Angela Beesley (which is the name of a 'Person' resource).
@prefix rdf: <http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#> .
@prefix rdfs: <http://www.w3.org/2000/01/rdf-schema#> .
@prefix foaf: <http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/> .
<#JW>
a foaf:Person ;
foaf:name "James Wales" ;
foaf:mbox <mailto:jwales@bomis.com> ;
foaf:homepage <http://www.jameswales.com> ;
foaf:nick "Jimbo" ;
foaf:depiction <http://www.jameswales.com/aus_img_small.jpg> ;
foaf:interest <http://www.wikimedia.org> ;
foaf:knows [
a foaf:Person ;
foaf:name "Angela Beesley"
] .
<http://www.wikimedia.org>
rdfs:label "Wikimedia" .
History
Versions
Version | Date | namespace URI | Description |
---|---|---|---|
0.98 | August 9, 2010 | http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/ | |
0.99 | January 14, 2014[12] | http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/ | Current version
Paddington Edition |
Old version Latest version |
See also
- Resource Description Framework (RDF)
- Web Ontology Language (OWL)
- Social web
- Semantic Web
- Description of a Career (DOAC)
- Description of a Project (DOAP)
- Semantically-Interlinked Online Communities (SIOC)
- hCard (HTML vCard)
- XHTML Friends Network (XFN)
References
- ↑ XML Watch: Finding friends with XML and RDF by Edd Dumbill in IBM DeveloperWorks
- ↑ XML Watch: Support online communities with FOAF by Edd Dumbill in IBM DeveloperWorks
- ↑ Berners Lee, Tim. "Giant Global Graph". Decentralized Information Group. Archived from the original on 2016-07-13.
- ↑ "LiveJournal FOAF". LiveJournal. Archived from the original on 2010-01-18..
- ↑ "Known FOAF data providers". FOAF project. Archived from the original on 2010-02-26.
- ↑ "press release on the social networking support". Yandex. 2008-08-15.
- ↑ "FOAF Support in Safari RSS". eJohn..
- ↑ "Semantic Radar plugin for the Firefox browser". Mozilla. Archived from the original on 2014-01-08. Retrieved 2012-02-20.
- ↑ "FOAF support module for Perl". CPAN.
- ↑ "FOAF+SSL authentication support for Perl". CPAN.
- ↑ http://drupal.org/project/foaf - FOAF support for Drupal
- ↑ Brickley, Dan; Miller, Libby (2014-01-14). "FOAF Vocabulary Specification 0.99". xmlns.com. FOAF project. Archived from the original on 2022-03-03. Retrieved 2022-03-31.
External links
- Official website (Archived 23 October 2021 at the Wayback Machine)
- FOAF dataset a dataset of 201,612 FOAF triples
- Archived: FOAF-search - a search engine for FOAF data at the Wayback Machine (archived 2018-11-30)