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This page is for keeping track of the representative [[hcard|hCard]] effort, which is part of [[hcard-brainstorming]], specifically to figure out how to both explicitly specify and discover the representative hCard for a page. | This page is for keeping track of the representative [[hcard|hCard]] effort, which is part of [[hcard-brainstorming]], specifically to figure out how to both explicitly specify and discover the representative hCard for a page. | ||
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Ok I get it, show me how to both publish and find the representative hCard for a person on a page. | Ok I get it, show me how to both publish and find the representative hCard for a person on a page. | ||
* how to publish: [[representative-hcard-authoring]] | * how to publish: [[representative-hcard-authoring]] | ||
* how to find: [[representative-hcard-parsing]] | * how to find/discover and parse: [[representative-hcard-parsing]] | ||
== use cases == | == use cases == | ||
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* should leverage current hCard information publishing patterns | * should leverage current hCard information publishing patterns | ||
* should not require any additional user interface elements (i.e. links) on any [[hcard-supporting-user-profiles|hCard supporting user profiles]]. | * should not require any additional user interface elements (i.e. links) on any [[hcard-supporting-user-profiles|hCard supporting user profiles]]. | ||
* should not use any hidden metadata on the page | |||
* should not use any hidden side files (e.g. random XML) | |||
== methodology == | == methodology == | ||
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* [[representative-hcard-formats]] - previous attempts at providing representative hCard or "person info" in general for a page that represents a person. | * [[representative-hcard-formats]] - previous attempts at providing representative hCard or "person info" in general for a page that represents a person. | ||
* [[representative-hcard-brainstorming]] - proposals for solving the problem | * [[representative-hcard-brainstorming]] - proposals for solving the problem | ||
== synonyms == | |||
This question has also been asked as: | |||
* What is the authoritative hCard for a page? | |||
* What is the authority of hCards on a page? | |||
* hCard authority? | |||
== related == | == related == | ||
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== see also == | == see also == | ||
{{representative-hcard-related-pages}} | |||
* [[hcard-brainstorming]] | * [[hcard-brainstorming]] |
Latest revision as of 16:32, 18 July 2020
This page is for keeping track of the representative hCard effort, which is part of hcard-brainstorming, specifically to figure out how to both explicitly specify and discover the representative hCard for a page.
problem statement
Given a URL, how do you determine which hCard is the representative hCard for that page?
Longer: Given a URL to a page that represents a person (e.g. an hCard supporting user profile), how do you determine which hCard on that page is the hCard for that person?
how to
Ok I get it, show me how to both publish and find the representative hCard for a person on a page.
- how to publish: representative-hcard-authoring
- how to find/discover and parse: representative-hcard-parsing
use cases
What are the real world use cases, applications, for auto-discovery of the representative hCard for the page?
- social-network-portability, in particular import or preferably subscribe to a person's hCard.
- profile icon discovery (e.g. what people use gravatar for and have proposed pavatar for). This appears to just be a subset of the profile import/subscribe use case and is thus listed as a nested use case.
- representative vCard auto extraction from the page. given a page representing a person, if you can determine the representative hCard on the page, you can convert that hCard to a vCard automatically and aggregate it into an address book service or application.
goals
- should leverage current hCard information publishing patterns
- should not require any additional user interface elements (i.e. links) on any hCard supporting user profiles.
- should not use any hidden metadata on the page
- should not use any hidden side files (e.g. random XML)
methodology
Methodology for a solution: The preferred option is to use only visible semantic HTML (POSH).
effort
- representative-hcard-examples - analysis of examples of hCards in the wild on pages representing individual people
- representative-hcard-formats - previous attempts at providing representative hCard or "person info" in general for a page that represents a person.
- representative-hcard-brainstorming - proposals for solving the problem
synonyms
This question has also been asked as:
- What is the authoritative hCard for a page?
- What is the authority of hCards on a page?
- hCard authority?
The representative hCard is merely the hCard that provides information about the person that the page represents.
It is NOT:
- contact for the page. similarly, the person a page represents is usually the person to contact for/about the page. as documented in the hCard FAQ, the contact for a page SHOULD be marked up with an
<address>
hCard. - author hCard. typically the person that a page represents is also the author of the page. possible (theoretical until someone finds/cites real world) examples: biographies, e.g. a page that represents person A is authored by person B.
- common misconception: "using <address> works when the person is the principal author of the page". This is misleading at best. It may "work", but
<address>
means contact for the page (as documented above), not necessarily the author. The two might coincidentally (even typically) be the same, but are not semantically equivalent.
- common misconception: "using <address> works when the person is the principal author of the page". This is misleading at best. It may "work", but
- owner hCard. more often than not, the person that a page represents is also the person that owns (meaning has primary control over, in the property sense) the page.
"representative hCard", "contact hCard", "author hCard", and "owner hCard" are all different semantics and can be different people for any given page, even if for many pages some or all of them might be the same person.
For more on these semantic distinctions, see hcards-and-pages.