SHACL - Shaping the Big Ball of Data Mud: W3C's Shapes Constraint Language: Difference between revisions

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Chapter: Berlin
Chapter: Berlin


Date: 12/17/2016
Date: Thursday, November 17, 2016 - 6:30 PM to 9:30 PM GMT+1


Location: Language World - Friedrichstrasse 101
Location: Language World - Friedrichstrasse 101
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URL: https://www.meetup.com/The-Berlin-Semantic-Web-Meetup-Group/events/234144306/
URL: https://www.meetup.com/The-Berlin-Semantic-Web-Meetup-Group/events/234144306/


Semantic Web technologies (such as RDF and SPARQL) excel at bringing together diverse data in a world of independent data publishers and consumers. Common ontologies help to arrive at a shared understanding of the intended meaning of data.  
Semantic Web technologies (such as RDF and SPARQL) excel at bringing together diverse data in a world of independent data publishers and consumers. Common ontologies help to arrive at a shared understanding of the intended meaning of data.  
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Speaker
Speaker:


Semantic Web Veteran, Richard Cyganiak - TopQuadrant.
[[Richard Cyganiak]] - Semantic Web Veteran - TopQuadrant  






Session-Level: Intermediate-Advanced  
Session-Level: Intermediate-Advanced  
Session-Type: Technology-Standards-Coding
Session-Type: Technology-Standards-Coding




[[Category:Event]]
[[Category:Event]]

Latest revision as of 11:52, 29 May 2020

Chapter: Berlin

Date: Thursday, November 17, 2016 - 6:30 PM to 9:30 PM GMT+1

Location: Language World - Friedrichstrasse 101

Event ID: 234144306

URL: https://www.meetup.com/The-Berlin-Semantic-Web-Meetup-Group/events/234144306/


Semantic Web technologies (such as RDF and SPARQL) excel at bringing together diverse data in a world of independent data publishers and consumers. Common ontologies help to arrive at a shared understanding of the intended meaning of data.

However, they don’t address one critically important issue: What does it mean for data to be complete and/or valid? Semantic knowledge graphs without a shared notion of completeness and validity quickly turn into a Big Ball of Data Mud.

The Shapes Constraint Language (SHACL), an upcoming W3C standard, promises to help solve this problem. By keeping semantics separate from validity, SHACL makes it possible to resolve a slew of data quality and data exchange issues.


Speaker:

Richard Cyganiak - Semantic Web Veteran - TopQuadrant


Session-Level: Intermediate-Advanced 
Session-Type: Technology-Standards-Coding