SIOC profile for 'sioc-project.org' A SIOC profile describes the structure and contents of a community site (e.g., weblog) in a machine processable form. For more information refer to the <a href="http://rdfs.org/sioc">SIOC project page</a> Twitter - more info in RDF See more ideas about Twitter in RDF below: > 4) Replies > If a post (A) has "@reply" to another user/post (B) (twitter homepage > already includes a hyperlink to a post it thinks this is in reply to) > that can be described as: > > > Keith has a point (re. IRC discussion) that the meaning of "@nick" on twitter may not necessarily mean that one message is in response to another. That is how twitter home page interprets it when saying "in response to " and linking to the last message written by that person. But it is not necessarily what that person mean (determining what someone was thinking about may be a difficult task anyway :). There are different options depending on how much we can derive from a twitter message and how deep into detail we want to do. You could: a) just say "person X mentioned person Y in his message (A)" - but would probably need a new (quite specific?) property for that. b) say that "person X replied to person Y in his message (A)" without specifying a particular message by Y that a reply is to. you could model this case similar are you would model Usenet or email messages - by Y being a recipient of a message. c) say that "person X in his message (A) replied to person's Y last message (B)" - in this case you can use sioc:has_reply. ... there can be more ways to look at it ... Depends on what you want to use this information for. > 5) More possibilities ... > have any cool ideas. E.g., you could go to person's homepage, extract > RDF (e.g., FOAF, SIOC) autodiscovery links from it and add it to the > exporter RDF. same with RDF embedded in person's homepage, of course. Another idea: Extract hyperlinks from tweet text and express them as sioc:links_to: 2007-05-17T09:38:40+01:00 2007-05-17T09:38:40+01:00