tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-876358347971598886.post4681757046111875973..comments2023-03-25T16:20:46.021+03:00Comments on nothingmuch's perl blog: Where are the open edges?nothingmuchhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03855760206940108541noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-876358347971598886.post-79343206729966670622010-04-26T06:24:09.845+03:002010-04-26T06:24:09.845+03:00Yeah more like an unordered ser ;-)
You're st...Yeah more like an unordered ser ;-)<br /><br />You're still allowed to see your own info and all info others make public via the graph API, but it's not decentralized in any way, and not a part of this open graph protocol, it's part of their JSON REST graph API.nothingmuchhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/03975438115490089158noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-876358347971598886.post-47841011086965562592010-04-26T04:55:54.537+03:002010-04-26T04:55:54.537+03:00Nice little point you make about FB's f8 annou...Nice little point you make about FB's f8 announcement. It claims right in its very name to be open graph thus implies open source, open OPEN! <br /><br />Yet the design never connects the user and his graph, disallowing him to see his own info! So does that mean "no" to free access of the information collected about oneself and one's contacts. And it isn't sharable anyway. Not so open after all...!<br /><br />Then the href's, yes, that is where the interconnection is captured best. Without that info, it resembles less and less of a graph, I presume?Ellie Khttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11231840376889029260noreply@blogger.com