Hi Marc,
I am not aware of any google linked data services, but you can be sure
the google lawyers will not allow any usage of the data set you
describe.
They process rich snippets[1] and display them in the search results.
This includes RDFa.
Your developer can consider himself lucky if
Hi Marc,
It is the right of the data provider to determine what the data may be
used for.
To an extent allowed by the copyright / database right law.
I would estimate for most datasets on the lod diagram you would not be
allowed to do what you describe. Most have some 'by' restriction so
On 9/27/10 4:37 PM, Vasiliy Faronov wrote:
Hi Marc,
It is the right of the data provider to determine what the data may be
used for.
To an extent allowed by the copyright / database right law.
I would estimate for most datasets on the lod diagram you would not be
allowed to do what you
Hi all,
as the Web of Linked Data is moving towards more serious applications,
putting published data under a proper license is becoming more and more
important. If no license is specified, people cannot use published data
within any serious applications.
Thus, I have stated a new LOD ESW wiki
An idle thought. Suppose I take two datasets, licensed
differently, and combine them. Maybe I do something
clever to capture provenance information in how they
are combined (a combination of opmv and evopat comes
to mind). If the licenses are defined at a suitable
granularity (is the cc vocabulary
Hi Chris,
If no license is specified, people cannot use published data within any
serious applications.
Even if my application only processes this data, never stores it, never
redistributes it?
I mean, can't I write an LD client that would go over a given website
and (through DC in RDFa)