When we hear about the semantic web there comes many questions in the mind of the user. Some users ask about the web data and its explanation whereas others ask about the contributions of an ordinary web user to this semantic web. Abandon Babel has defined the philosophy behind this semantic web so clearly and easily that any ordinary user can understand that semantic web is “A web of data”. According to W3C and Tim Berners-Lee the amazing world of web is a virtual place for both machines and humans to start off from one database to an
"'A web of data' is a well conducted explanation of the Semantic Web. From the beginning, Tim Berners-Lee and the W3C expected the Web to become a place that allows humans and machines "to start off in one database, and then move through an unending set of databases which are connected not by wires but by being about the same thing." In the Semantic Web, data is annotated with unambiguous definitions and connected by meaningful links. The entire Web thus becomes a network of machine-processable data (including links, which are also data in another
1. Introduction
There is a recent tendency in the Semantic Web community to stress the Web aspect of the Semantic Web, meaning that the Semantic Web is increasingly understood as a single, global information space consisting of interlinked RDF data.
This tendency is carried by the revival of ideas around interlinking data on the Semantic Web: Current W3C efforts stress the fact that URI references should be dereference-able (W3C working draft on Best Practice Recipes for Publishing RDF Vocabularies). There is a nice memo by Tim Berners-Lee about