invisible-data-considered-harmful: Difference between revisions
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See [http://tantek.com/log/2005/06.html#d03t2359 Principles of visibility and human friendliness]. | See [http://tantek.com/log/2005/06.html#d03t2359 Principles of visibility and human friendliness]. | ||
Also known as, "dark data", "meta tags", "side files". | |||
== invisible metadata failures == | |||
* meta keywords | |||
** popular in the 1990s, eventually spammed, and rotten, ignored by Google, Yahoo, and other search engines. | |||
* meta ICBM | |||
** people move, don't bother to update their meta ICBM | |||
** people get it wrong (because it's not obviously visible) | |||
*** swapping lat and long | |||
*** "correcting" negative values to positive (or vice versa) | |||
*** note clusters of sites in the middle of oceans or other open spaces that correlate with inverse (or negated) coordinates of actual cities | |||
* lang="en" | |||
** lots of templates, CMS's shipped with this default | |||
** people used them worldwide | |||
** now lang="en" is effectively meaningless/untrustworthy since tons of non-en sites all have it (from abovementioned templates etc.) | |||
== related == | == related == | ||
* [[namespaces-considered-harmful]] | * [[namespaces-considered-harmful]] | ||
* [[namespaced-attributes-considered-harmful]] | * [[namespaced-attributes-considered-harmful]] | ||
* [[principles]] | |||
* [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Don%C2%B4t_repeat_yourself The "DRY" principle] |
Revision as of 02:12, 19 June 2010
invisible data considered harmful
This article is a stub.
Invisible data or metadata for that matter is undesirable.
See Principles of visibility and human friendliness.
Also known as, "dark data", "meta tags", "side files".
invisible metadata failures
- meta keywords
- popular in the 1990s, eventually spammed, and rotten, ignored by Google, Yahoo, and other search engines.
- meta ICBM
- people move, don't bother to update their meta ICBM
- people get it wrong (because it's not obviously visible)
- swapping lat and long
- "correcting" negative values to positive (or vice versa)
- note clusters of sites in the middle of oceans or other open spaces that correlate with inverse (or negated) coordinates of actual cities
- lang="en"
- lots of templates, CMS's shipped with this default
- people used them worldwide
- now lang="en" is effectively meaningless/untrustworthy since tons of non-en sites all have it (from abovementioned templates etc.)