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Link to original content: http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/name
FOAF Vocabulary Specification

FOAF Vocabulary Specification 0.99

Namespace Document 14 January 2014 - Paddington Edition

This version:
http://xmlns.com/foaf/spec/20140114.html (rdf)
Latest version:
http://xmlns.com/foaf/spec/ (rdf)
Previous version:
http://xmlns.com/foaf/spec/20100809.html (rdf)
Authors:
Dan Brickley, Libby Miller
Contributors:
Members of the FOAF mailing list (foaf-dev@lists.foaf-project.org) and the wider RDF and Semantic Web developer community. See acknowledgements.

Creative Commons License This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution License. This copyright applies to the FOAF Vocabulary Specification and accompanying documentation in RDF. Regarding underlying technology, FOAF uses W3C's RDF technology, an open Web standard that can be freely used by anyone.


Abstract

This specification describes the FOAF language, defined as a dictionary of named properties and classes using W3C's RDF technology.

FOAF is a project devoted to linking people and information using the Web. Regardless of whether information is in people's heads, in physical or digital documents, or in the form of factual data, it can be linked. FOAF integrates three kinds of network: social networks of human collaboration, friendship and association; representational networks that describe a simplified view of a cartoon universe in factual terms, and information networks that use Web-based linking to share independently published descriptions of this inter-connected world. FOAF does not compete with socially-oriented Web sites; rather it provides an approach in which different sites can tell different parts of the larger story, and by which users can retain some control over their information in a non-proprietary format.

Status of This Document

FOAF has been evolving gradually since its creation in mid-2000. There is now a stable core of classes and properties that will not be changed, beyond modest adjustments to their documentation to track implementation feedback and emerging best practices. New terms may be added at any time (as with a natural-language dictionary), and consequently this specification is an evolving work. The FOAF RDF namespace URI, by contrast, is fixed and its identifier is not expected to change. Furthermore, efforts are underway to ensure the long-term preservation of the FOAF namespace, its xmlns.com domain name and associated documentation.

The FOAF specification is produced as part of the FOAF project, to provide authoritative documentation of the contents, status and purpose of the RDF/XML vocabulary and document formats known informally as 'FOAF'.

This document is created by combining the RDFS/OWL machine-readable FOAF ontology with a set of per-term documents. Future versions may incorporate multilingual translations of the term definitions. An RDF/XML encoding of the specification is available by direct link or by HTTP content negotiation from the namespace URI. The HTML specification no longer embeds the RDF/XML markup; however an experimental subset of the RDF is included in this document using RDFa notation.

The authors welcome comments on this document, preferably via the public FOAF developers list foaf-dev@lists.foaf-project.org; public archives are available. A historical backlog of known technical issues is acknowledged, and available for discussion on the FOAF mailing list. Proposals for resolving these issues are welcomed, on foaf-dev. Further work is also needed on the explanatory text in this specification and on the FOAF website; progress towards this will be measured in the version number of future revisions to the FOAF specification.

Changes in version 0.99

This revision stablises weblog, page, Document and Image and adds three owl:equivalent classes to schema.org - Person (Person), Image (ImageObject), Document (CreativeWork).

See the changes section for more detailed change-log information.

Table of Contents

FOAF at a glance

FOAF describes the world using simple ideas inspired by the Web. In FOAF descriptions, there are only various kinds of things and links, which we call properties. The types of the things we talk about in FOAF are called classes. FOAF is therefore defined as a dictionary of terms, each of which is either a class or a property. Other projects alongside FOAF provide other sets of classes and properties, many of which are linked with those defined in FOAF.

FOAF descriptions are themselves published as linked documents in the Web (eg. using RDF/XML or RDFa syntax). The result of the FOAF project is a network of documents describing a network of people (and other stuff). Each FOAF document is itself an encoding of a descriptive network structure. Although these documents do not always agree or tell the truth, they have the useful characteristic that they can be easily merged, allowing partial and decentralised descriptions to be combined in interesting ways.

FOAF collects a variety of terms; some describe people, some groups, some documents. Different kinds of application can use or ignore different parts of FOAF. The overview here shows one way of viewing FOAF terms: we ignore archaic and historical parts, and divide the rest into terms that only make sense on the Web, and those that have universal applicability when linking people and information.

Main FOAF terms, grouped in broad categories.

FOAF Core

Social Web

A-Z of FOAF terms (current and archaic)

This is a complete alphabetical A-Z index of all FOAF terms, by class (categories or types) and by property. Note that it includes 'archaic' terms that are largely of historical interest.

Classes: | Agent | Document | Group | Image | LabelProperty | OnlineAccount | OnlineChatAccount | OnlineEcommerceAccount | OnlineGamingAccount | Organization | Person | PersonalProfileDocument | Project |

Properties: | account | accountName | accountServiceHomepage | age | aimChatID | based_near | birthday | currentProject | depiction | depicts | dnaChecksum | familyName | family_name | firstName | focus | fundedBy | geekcode | gender | givenName | givenname | holdsAccount | homepage | icqChatID | img | interest | isPrimaryTopicOf | jabberID | knows | lastName | logo | made | maker | mbox | mbox_sha1sum | member | membershipClass | msnChatID | myersBriggs | name | nick | openid | page | pastProject | phone | plan | primaryTopic | publications | schoolHomepage | sha1 | skypeID | status | surname | theme | thumbnail | tipjar | title | topic | topic_interest | weblog | workInfoHomepage | workplaceHomepage | yahooChatID |

Example

Here is a very basic document describing a person:

<foaf:Person rdf:about="#danbri" xmlns:foaf="http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/">
  <foaf:name>Dan Brickley</foaf:name>
  <foaf:homepage rdf:resource="http://danbri.org/" />
  <foaf:openid rdf:resource="http://danbri.org/" />
  <foaf:img rdf:resource="/images/me.jpg" />
</foaf:Person>

This brief example introduces the basics of FOAF. It basically says, "there is a foaf:Person with a foaf:name property of 'Dan Brickley'; this person stands in foaf:homepage and foaf:openid relationship to a thing called http://danbri.org/ and a foaf:img relationship to a thing referenced by a relative URI of /images/me.jpg

1 Introduction: FOAF Basics

The Semantic Web

To a computer, the Web is a flat, boring world, devoid of meaning. This is a pity, as in fact documents on the Web describe real objects and imaginary concepts, and give particular relationships between them. For example, a document might describe a person. The title document to a house describes a house and also the ownership relation with a person. Adding semantics to the Web involves two things: allowing documents which have information in machine-readable forms, and allowing links to be created with relationship values. Only when we have this extra level of semantics will we be able to use computer power to help us exploit the information to a greater extent than our own reading. - Tim Berners-Lee "W3 future directions" keynote, 1st World Wide Web Conference Geneva, May 1994

I express my network in a FOAF file, and that is a start of the revolution. - TimBL 2007, Giant Global Graph (foaf)

FOAF is a project devoted to linking people and information using the Web. Regardless of whether information is in people's heads, in physical or digital documents, or in the form of factual data, it can be linked. FOAF integrates three kinds of network: social networks of human collaboration, friendship and association; representational networks that describe a simplified view of a cartoon universe in factual terms, and information networks that use Web-based linking to share independently published descriptions of this inter-connected world. FOAF does not compete with socially-oriented Web sites; rather it provides an approach in which different sites can tell different parts of the larger story, and through which users can retain some control over their information in a non-proprietary format.

FOAF and the Semantic Web

FOAF, like the Web itself, is a linked information system. It is built using decentralised Semantic Web technology, and has been designed to allow for integration of data across a variety of applications, Web sites and services, and software systems. To achieve this, FOAF takes a liberal approach to data exchange. It does not require you to say anything at all about yourself or others, nor does it place any limits on the things you can say or the variety of Semantic Web vocabularies you may use in doing so. This current specification provides a basic "dictionary" of terms for talking about people and the things they make and do.

FOAF was designed to be used alongside other such dictionaries ("schemas" or "ontologies"), and to be usable with the wide variety of generic tools and services that have been created for the Semantic Web. For example, the W3C work on SPARQL provides us with a rich query language for consulting databases of FOAF data, while the SKOS initiative explores in more detail than FOAF the problem of describing topics, categories, "folksonomies" and subject hierarchies. Meanwhile, other W3C groups are working on improved mechanisms for encoding all kinds of RDF data (including but not limited to FOAF) within Web pages: see the work of the GRDDL and RDFa efforts for more detail. The Semantic Web provides us with an architecture for collaboration, allowing complex technical challenges to be shared by a loosely-coordinated community of developers.

The FOAF project is based around the use of machine readable Web homepages for people, groups, companies and other kinds of thing. To achieve this we use the "FOAF vocabulary" to provide a collection of basic terms that can be used in these Web pages. At the heart of the FOAF project is a set of definitions designed to serve as a dictionary of terms that can be used to express claims about the world. The initial focus of FOAF has been on the description of people, since people are the things that link together most of the other kinds of things we describe in the Web: they make documents, attend meetings, are depicted in photos, and so on.

The FOAF Vocabulary definitions presented here are written using a computer language (RDF/OWL) that makes it easy for software to process some basic facts about the terms in the FOAF vocabulary, and consequently about the things described in FOAF documents. A FOAF document, unlike a traditional Web page, can be combined with other FOAF documents to create a unified database of information. FOAF is a Linked Data system, in that it based around the idea of linking together a Web of decentralised descriptions.

The Basic Idea

The basic idea is pretty simple. If people publish information in the FOAF document format, machines will be able to make use of that information. If those files contain "see also" references to other such documents in the Web, we will have a machine-friendly version of today's hypertext Web. Computer programs will be able to scutter around a Web of documents designed for machines rather than humans, storing the information they find, keeping a list of "see also" pointers to other documents, checking digital signatures (for the security minded) and building Web pages and question-answering services based on the harvested documents.

So, what is the 'FOAF document format'? FOAF files are just text documents (well, Unicode documents). They adopt the conventions of the Resource Description Framework (RDF), and may be written in XML syntax or any other of the syntaxes of RDF such as RDFa or N3. In addition, the FOAF vocabulary defines some useful constructs that can appear in FOAF files, alongside other RDF vocabularies defined elsewhere. For example, FOAF defines categories ('classes') such as foaf:Person, foaf:Document, foaf:Image, alongside some handy properties of those things, such as foaf:name, foaf:mbox (ie. an internet mailbox), foaf:homepage etc., as well as some useful kinds of relationship that hold between members of these categories. For example, one interesting relationship type is foaf:depiction. This relates something (eg. a foaf:Person) to a foaf:Image. The FOAF demos that feature photos and listings of 'who is in which picture' are based on software tools that parse RDF documents and make use of these properties.

The specific contents of the FOAF vocabulary are detailed in this FOAF namespace document. In addition to the FOAF vocabulary, one of the most interesting features of a FOAF file is that it can contain "see Also" pointers to other FOAF files. This provides a basis for automatic harvesting tools to traverse a Web of interlinked files, and learn about new people, documents, services, data...

The remainder of this specification describes how to publish and interpret descriptions such as these on the Web, using RDF/XML for syntax (file format) and terms from FOAF. It introduces a number of categories (RDF classes such as 'Person') and properties (relationship and attribute types such as 'mbox' or 'workplaceHomepage'). Each term definition is provided in both human and machine-readable form, hyperlinked for quick reference.

What's FOAF for?

For an early general introduction to FOAF, see Edd Dumbill's article, XML Watch: Finding friends with XML and RDF (June 2002, IBM developerWorks). Information about the use of FOAF with image metadata is also available.

The co-depiction experiment shows a fun use of the vocabulary. To create a FOAF document, you can use Leigh Dodd's FOAF-a-matic javascript tool. For more information on FOAF and related projects, see the FOAF project home page.

Background

FOAF is a collaborative effort amongst developers on the FOAF (foaf-dev@lists.foaf-project.org) mailing list. The name 'FOAF' is derived from traditional internet usage, an acronym for 'Friend of a Friend'.

The name was chosen to reflect our concern with social networks and the Web, urban myths, trust and connections. Other uses of the name continue, notably in the documentation and investigation of Urban Legends (eg. see the alt.folklore.urban archive or snopes.com), and other FOAF stories. Our use of the name 'FOAF' for a Web vocabulary and document format is intended to complement, rather than replace, these prior uses. FOAF documents describe the characteristics and relationships amongst friends of friends, and their friends, and the stories they tell.

FOAF and Standards

It is important to understand that the FOAF vocabulary as specified in this document is not a standard in the sense of ISO Standardisation, or that associated with W3C Process.

FOAF depends heavily on W3C's standards work, specifically on XML, XML Namespaces, RDF, and OWL. All FOAF documents must be well-formed RDF documents. The FOAF vocabulary, by contrast, is managed more in the style of an Open Source or Free Software project than as an industry standardarisation effort (eg. see Jabber JEPs).

This specification contributes a vocabulary, "FOAF", to the Semantic Web, specifying it using W3C's Resource Description Framework (RDF). As such, FOAF adopts by reference both syntaxes (using XML, N3, or RDFa) a data model (RDF graphs) and a mathematically grounded definition for the rules that underpin the FOAF design.

The FOAF Vocabulary Description

This specification serves as the FOAF "namespace document". As such it describes the FOAF vocabulary the terms (RDF classes and properties) that constitute it, so that Semantic Web applications can use those terms in a variety of RDF-compatible document formats and applications.

This document presents FOAF as a Semantic Web vocabulary or Ontology. The FOAF vocabulary is pretty simple, pragmatic and designed to allow simultaneous deployment and extension. FOAF is intended for widescale use, but its authors make no commitments regarding its suitability for any particular purpose.

Evolution and Extension of FOAF

The FOAF vocabulary is identified by the namespace URI 'http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/'. Revisions and extensions of FOAF are conducted through edits to this document, which by convention is accessible in the Web via the namespace URI. For practical and deployment reasons, note that we do not update the namespace URI as the vocabulary matures.

Much of FOAF now is considered stable. Each release of this specification document has an incrementally increased version number, even while the technical namespace ID remains fixed and includes the original value of "0.1". It long ago became impractical to update the namespace URI without causing huge disruption to both producers and consumers of FOAF data. We are left with the digits "0.1" in our URI. This stands as a warning to all those who might embed metadata in their vocabulary identifiers.

The evolution of FOAF is best considered in terms of the stability of individual vocabulary terms, rather than the specification as a whole. As terms stabilise in usage and documentation, they progress through the categories 'unstable', 'testing' and 'stable'. Older terms are marked 'archaic' which allows the possibility of older forms to become modern again.

The properties and types defined here provide some basic useful concepts for use in FOAF descriptions. Other vocabulary (eg. the Dublin Core metadata elements for simple bibliographic description), RSS 1.0 etc can also be mixed in with FOAF terms, as can local extensions. FOAF is designed to be extended.

FOAF Auto-Discovery: Publishing and Linking FOAF files

If you publish a FOAF self-description (eg. using foaf-a-matic) you can make it easier for tools to find your FOAF by putting markup in the head of your HTML homepage. It doesn't really matter what filename you choose for your FOAF document, although foaf.rdf is a common choice. The linking markup is as follows:

  <link rel="meta" type="application/rdf+xml" title="FOAF"
               href="?x=http://xmlns.comhttp://example.com/~you/foaf.rdf"/>

...although of course change the URL to point to your own FOAF document. See also: more on FOAF autodiscovery and services that make use of it.

FOAF cross-reference: Listing FOAF Classes and Properties

FOAF introduces the following classes and properties. A machine-friendly version is also available in RDF/XML.

Classes: | Agent | Document | Group | Image | LabelProperty | OnlineAccount | OnlineChatAccount | OnlineEcommerceAccount | OnlineGamingAccount | Organization | Person | PersonalProfileDocument | Project |

Properties: | account | accountName | accountServiceHomepage | age | aimChatID | based_near | birthday | currentProject | depiction | depicts | dnaChecksum | familyName | family_name | firstName | focus | fundedBy | geekcode | gender | givenName | givenname | holdsAccount | homepage | icqChatID | img | interest | isPrimaryTopicOf | jabberID | knows | lastName | logo | made | maker | mbox | mbox_sha1sum | member | membershipClass | msnChatID | myersBriggs | name | nick | openid | page | pastProject | phone | plan | primaryTopic | publications | schoolHomepage | sha1 | skypeID | status | surname | theme | thumbnail | tipjar | title | topic | topic_interest | weblog | workInfoHomepage | workplaceHomepage | yahooChatID |

Classes and Properties (full detail)


Classes

Class: foaf:Agent

Agent - An agent (eg. person, group, software or physical artifact).
Status: stable
Properties include: gender yahooChatID account birthday icqChatID aimChatID jabberID made mbox interest tipjar skypeID topic_interest age mbox_sha1sum status msnChatID openid holdsAccount weblog
Used with: maker member
Has Subclass Group Person Organization

The Agent class is the class of agents; things that do stuff. A well known sub-class is Person, representing people. Other kinds of agents include Organization and Group.

The Agent class is useful in a few places in FOAF where Person would have been overly specific. For example, the IM chat ID properties such as jabberID are typically associated with people, but sometimes belong to software bots.

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Class: foaf:Document

Document - A document.
Status: stable
Properties include: topic primaryTopic sha1
Used with: workInfoHomepage workplaceHomepage page accountServiceHomepage openid tipjar schoolHomepage publications isPrimaryTopicOf interest homepage weblog
Has Subclass Image PersonalProfileDocument
Disjoint With: Project Organization

The Document class represents those things which are, broadly conceived, 'documents'.

The Image class is a sub-class of Document, since all images are documents.

We do not (currently) distinguish precisely between physical and electronic documents, or between copies of a work and the abstraction those copies embody. The relationship between documents and their byte-stream representation needs clarification (see sha1 for related issues).

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Class: foaf:Group

Group - A class of Agents.
Status: stable
Properties include: member
Subclass Of Agent

The Group class represents a collection of individual agents (and may itself play the role of a Agent, ie. something that can perform actions).

This concept is intentionally quite broad, covering informal and ad-hoc groups, long-lived communities, organizational groups within a workplace, etc. Some such groups may have associated characteristics which could be captured in RDF (perhaps a homepage, name, mailing list etc.).

While a Group has the characteristics of a Agent, it is also associated with a number of other Agents (typically people) who constitute the Group. FOAF provides a mechanism, the membershipClass property, which relates a Group to a sub-class of the class Agent who are members of the group. This is a little complicated, but allows us to make group membership rules explicit.

The markup (shown below) for defining a group is both complex and powerful. It allows group membership rules to match against any RDF-describable characteristics of the potential group members. As FOAF and similar vocabularies become more expressive in their ability to describe individuals, the Group mechanism for categorising them into groups also becomes more powerful.

While the formal description of membership criteria for a Group may be complex, the basic mechanism for saying that someone is in a Group is very simple. We simply use a member property of the Group to indicate the agents that are members of the group. For example:

 
<foaf:Group>
 <foaf:name>ILRT staff</foaf:name>
 <foaf:member>
  <foaf:Person>
   <foaf:name>Martin Poulter</foaf:name>
   <foaf:homepage rdf:resource="http://www.ilrt.bris.ac.uk/aboutus/staff/staffprofile/?search=plmlp"/>
   <foaf:workplaceHomepage rdf:resource="http://www.ilrt.bris.ac.uk/"/>
  </foaf:Person>
 </foaf:member>
</foaf:Group>

Behind the scenes, further RDF statements can be used to express the rules for being a member of this group. End-users of FOAF need not pay attention to these details.

Here is an example. We define a Group representing those people who are ILRT staff members (ILRT is a department at the University of Bristol). The membershipClass property connects the group (conceived of as a social entity and agent in its own right) with the class definition for those people who constitute it. In this case, the rule is that all group members are in the ILRTStaffPerson class, which is in turn populated by all those things that are a Person and which have a workplaceHomepage of http://www.ilrt.bris.ac.uk/. This is typical: FOAF groups are created by specifying a sub-class of Agent (in fact usually this will be a sub-class of Person), and giving criteria for which things fall in or out of the sub-class. For this, we use the owl:onProperty and owl:hasValue properties, indicating the property/value pairs which must be true of matching agents.

<!-- here we see a FOAF group described.
     each foaf group may be associated with an OWL definition 
     specifying the class of agents that constitute the group's membership -->
<foaf:Group>
 <foaf:name>ILRT staff</foaf:name>
 <foaf:membershipClass>
    <owl:Class rdf:about="http://ilrt.example.com/groups#ILRTStaffPerson">
     <rdfs:subClassOf rdf:resource="http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/Person"/>
     <rdfs:subClassOf>
       <owl:Restriction> 
         <owl:onProperty rdf:resource="http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/workplaceHomepage"/>
         <owl:hasValue rdf:resource="http://www.ilrt.bris.ac.uk/"/>
       </owl:Restriction> 
     </rdfs:subClassOf>
   </owl:Class>
 </foaf:membershipClass>
</foaf:Group>

Note that while these example OWL rules for being in the eg:ILRTStaffPerson class are based on a Person having a particular workplaceHomepage, this places no obligations on the authors of actual FOAF documents to include this information. If the information is included, then generic OWL tools may infer that some person is an eg:ILRTStaffPerson. To go the extra step and infer that some eg:ILRTStaffPerson is a member of the group whose name is "ILRT staff", tools will need some knowledge of the way FOAF deals with groups. In other words, generic OWL technology gets us most of the way, but the full Group machinery requires extra work for implimentors.

The current design names the relationship as pointing from the group, to the member. This is convenient when writing XML/RDF that encloses the members within markup that describes the group. Alternate representations of the same content are allowed in RDF, so you can write claims about the Person and the Group without having to nest either description inside the other. For (brief) example:

<foaf:Group>
 <foaf:member rdf:nodeID="martin"/>
 <!-- more about the group here -->
</foaf:Group>
<foaf:Person rdf:nodeID="martin">
  <!-- more about martin here -->
</foaf:Person>

There is a FOAF issue tracker associated with this FOAF term. A design goal is to make the most of W3C's OWL language for representing group-membership criteria, while also making it easy to leverage existing groups and datasets available online (eg. buddylists, mailing list membership lists etc). Feedback on the current design is solicited! Should we consider using SPARQL queries instead, for example?

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Class: foaf:Image

Image - An image.
Status: stable
Properties include: depicts thumbnail
Used with: img thumbnail depiction
Subclass Of Document

The class Image is a sub-class of Document corresponding to those documents which are images.

Digital images (such as JPEG, PNG, GIF bitmaps, SVG diagrams etc.) are examples of Image.

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Class: foaf:Organization

Organization - An organization.
Status: stable
Subclass Of Agent
Disjoint With: Document Person

The Organization class represents a kind of Agent corresponding to social instititutions such as companies, societies etc.

This is a more 'solid' class than Group, which allows for more ad-hoc collections of individuals. These terms, like the corresponding natural language concepts, have some overlap, but different emphasis.

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Class: foaf:Person

Person - A person.
Status: stable
Properties include: plan surname geekcode pastProject lastName family_name publications currentProject familyName firstName workInfoHomepage myersBriggs schoolHomepage img workplaceHomepage knows
Used with: knows
Subclass Of Agent Spatial Thing
Disjoint With: Project Organization

The Person class represents people. Something is a Person if it is a person. We don't nitpic about whether they're alive, dead, real, or imaginary. The Person class is a sub-class of the Agent class, since all people are considered 'agents' in FOAF.

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Class: foaf:OnlineAccount

Online Account - An online account.
Status: testing
Properties include: accountName accountServiceHomepage
Used with: account holdsAccount
Subclass Of Thing
Has Subclass Online E-commerce Account Online Gaming Account Online Chat Account

The OnlineAccount class represents the provision of some form of online service, by some party (indicated indirectly via a accountServiceHomepage) to some Agent. The account property of the agent is used to indicate accounts that are associated with the agent.

See OnlineChatAccount for an example. Other sub-classes include OnlineEcommerceAccount and OnlineGamingAccount.

One deployment style for this construct is to use URIs for well-known documents (or other entities) that strongly embody the account-holding relationship; for example, user profile pages on social network sites. This has the advantage of providing URIs that are likely to be easy to link with other information, but means that the instances of this class should not be considered 'accounts' in the abstract or business sense of a 'contract'.

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Class: foaf:PersonalProfileDocument

PersonalProfileDocument - A personal profile RDF document.
Status: testing
Subclass Of Document

The PersonalProfileDocument class represents those things that are a Document, and that use RDF to describe properties of the person who is the maker of the document. There is just one Person described in the document, ie. the person who made it and who will be its primaryTopic.

The PersonalProfileDocument class, and FOAF's associated conventions for describing it, captures an important deployment pattern for the FOAF vocabulary. FOAF is very often used in public RDF documents made available through the Web. There is a colloquial notion that these "FOAF files" are often somebody's FOAF file. Through PersonalProfileDocument we provide a machine-readable expression of this concept, providing a basis for FOAF documents to make claims about their maker and topic.

When describing a PersonalProfileDocument it is typical (and useful) to describe its associated Person using the maker property. Anything that is a Person and that is the maker of some PersonalProfileDocument will be the primaryTopic of that Document. Although this can be inferred, it is often helpful to include this information explicitly within the PersonalProfileDocument.

For example, here is a fragment of a personal profile document which describes its author explicitly:

<foaf:Person rdf:nodeID="p1">
 <foaf:name>Dan Brickley</foaf:name>
 <foaf:homepage rdf:resource="http://danbri.org/"/>
 <!-- etc... -->
</foaf:Person>

<foaf:PersonalProfileDocument rdf:about="">
   <foaf:maker rdf:nodeID="p1"/>
   <foaf:primaryTopic rdf:nodeID="p1"/>
</foaf:PersonalProfileDocument>

Note that a PersonalProfileDocument will have some representation as RDF. Typically this will be in W3C's RDF/XML syntax, however we leave open the possibility for the use of other notations, or representational conventions including automated transformations from HTML (GRDDL spec for one such technique).

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Class: foaf:Project

Project - A project (a collective endeavour of some kind).
Status: testing
Disjoint With: Document Person

The Project class represents the class of things that are 'projects'. These may be formal or informal, collective or individual. It is often useful to indicate the homepage of a Project.

Further work is needed to specify the connections between this class and the FOAF properties currentProject and pastProject.

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Class: foaf:LabelProperty

Label Property - A foaf:LabelProperty is any RDF property with texual values that serve as labels.
Status: unstable

A LabelProperty is any RDF property with texual values that serve as labels.

Any property that is a LabelProperty is effectively a sub-property of rdfs:label. This utility class provides an alternate means of expressing this idea, in a way that may help with OWL 2.0 DL compatibility.

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Class: foaf:OnlineChatAccount

Online Chat Account - An online chat account.
Status: unstable
Subclass Of Online Account

A OnlineChatAccount is a OnlineAccount devoted to chat / instant messaging. The account may offer other services too; FOAF's sub-classes of OnlineAccount are not mutually disjoint.

This is a generalization of the FOAF Chat ID properties, jabberID, aimChatID, skypeID, msnChatID, icqChatID and yahooChatID.

Unlike those simple properties, OnlineAccount and associated FOAF terms allows us to describe a great variety of online accounts, without having to anticipate them in the FOAF vocabulary.

For example, here is a description of an IRC chat account, specific to the Freenode IRC network:

<foaf:Person>
  <foaf:name>Dan Brickley</foaf:name>
  <foaf:account>
    <foaf:OnlineAccount>
      <rdf:type rdf:resource="http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/OnlineChatAccount"/>
      <foaf:accountServiceHomepage 
               rdf:resource="http://www.freenode.net/"/>
      <foaf:accountName>danbri</foaf:accountName>
    </foaf:OnlineAccount>
  </foaf:account>
</foaf:Person>

Note that it may be impolite to carelessly reveal someone else's chat identifier (which might also serve as an indicate of email address) As with email, there are privacy and anti-SPAM considerations. FOAF does not currently provide a way to represent an obfuscated chat ID (ie. there is no parallel to the mbox / mbox_sha1sum mapping).

In addition to the generic OnlineAccount and OnlineChatAccount mechanisms, FOAF also provides several convenience chat ID properties (jabberID, aimChatID, icqChatID, msnChatID,yahooChatID, skypeID). These serve as as a shorthand for some common cases; their use may not always be appropriate.

We should specify some mappings between the abbreviated and full representations of Jabber, AIM, MSN, ICQ, Yahoo! and MSN chat accounts. This has been done for skypeID. This requires us to identify an appropriate accountServiceHomepage for each. If we wanted to make the OnlineAccount mechanism even more generic, we could invent a relationship that holds between a OnlineAccount instance and a convenience property. To continue the example above, we could describe how Freenode could define a property 'fn:freenodeChatID' corresponding to Freenode online accounts.

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Class: foaf:OnlineEcommerceAccount

Online E-commerce Account - An online e-commerce account.
Status: unstable
Subclass Of Online Account

A OnlineEcommerceAccount is a OnlineAccount devoted to buying and/or selling of goods, services etc. Examples include Amazon, eBay, PayPal, thinkgeek, etc.

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Class: foaf:OnlineGamingAccount

Online Gaming Account - An online gaming account.
Status: unstable
Subclass Of Online Account

A OnlineGamingAccount is a OnlineAccount devoted to online gaming.

Examples might include EverQuest, Xbox live, Neverwinter Nights, etc., as well as older text-based systems (MOOs, MUDs and suchlike).

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Properties

Property: foaf:homepage

homepage - A homepage for some thing.
Status: stable
Domain: having this property implies being a Thing
Range: every value of this property is a Document
Inverse Functional Property

The homepage property relates something to a homepage about it.

Many kinds of things have homepages. FOAF allows a thing to have multiple homepages, but constrains homepage so that there can be only one thing that has any particular homepage.

A 'homepage' in this sense is a public Web document, typically but not necessarily available in HTML format. The page has as a topic the thing whose homepage it is. The homepage is usually controlled, edited or published by the thing whose homepage it is; as such one might look to a homepage for information on its owner from its owner. This works for people, companies, organisations etc.

The homepage property is a sub-property of the more general page property for relating a thing to a page about that thing. See also topic, the inverse of the page property.

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Property: foaf:isPrimaryTopicOf

is primary topic of - A document that this thing is the primary topic of.
Status: stable
Domain: having this property implies being a Thing
Range: every value of this property is a Document
Inverse Functional Property

The isPrimaryTopicOf property relates something to a document that is mainly about it.

The isPrimaryTopicOf property is inverse functional: for any document that is the value of this property, there is at most one thing in the world that is the primary topic of that document. This is useful, as it allows for data merging, as described in the documentation for its inverse, primaryTopic.

page is a super-property of isPrimaryTopicOf. The change of terminology between the two property names reflects the utility of 'primaryTopic' and its inverse when identifying things. Anything that has an isPrimaryTopicOf relation to some document X, also has a page relationship to it.

Note that homepage, is a sub-property of both page and isPrimaryTopicOf. The awkwardly named isPrimaryTopicOf is less specific, and can be used with any document that is primarily about the thing of interest (ie. not just on homepages).

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Property: foaf:knows

knows - A person known by this person (indicating some level of reciprocated interaction between the parties).
Status: stable
Domain: having this property implies being a Person
Range: every value of this property is a Person

The knows property relates a Person to another Person that he or she knows.

We take a broad view of 'knows', but do require some form of reciprocated interaction (ie. stalkers need not apply). Since social attitudes and conventions on this topic vary greatly between communities, counties and cultures, it is not appropriate for FOAF to be overly-specific here.

If someone knows a person, it would be usual for the relation to be reciprocated. However this doesn't mean that there is any obligation for either party to publish FOAF describing this relationship. A knows relationship does not imply friendship, endorsement, or that a face-to-face meeting has taken place: phone, fax, email, and smoke signals are all perfectly acceptable ways of communicating with people you know.

You probably know hundreds of people, yet might only list a few in your public FOAF file. That's OK. Or you might list them all. It is perfectly fine to have a FOAF file and not list anyone else in it at all. This illustrates the Semantic Web principle of partial description: RDF documents rarely describe the entire picture. There is always more to be said, more information living elsewhere in the Web (or in our heads...).

Since knows is vague by design, it may be suprising that it has uses. Typically these involve combining other RDF properties. For example, an application might look at properties of each weblog that was made by someone you "knows". Or check the newsfeed of the online photo archive for each of these people, to show you recent photos taken by people you know.

To provide additional levels of representation beyond mere 'knows', FOAF applications can do several things.

They can use more precise relationships than knows to relate people to people. The original FOAF design included two of these ('knowsWell','friend') which we removed because they were somewhat awkward to actually use, bringing an inappopriate air of precision to an intrinsically vague concept. Other extensions have been proposed, including Eric Vitiello's Relationship module for FOAF.

In addition to using more specialised inter-personal relationship types (eg rel:acquaintanceOf etc) it is often just as good to use RDF descriptions of the states of affairs which imply particular kinds of relationship. So for example, two people who have the same value for their workplaceHomepage property are typically colleagues. We don't (currently) clutter FOAF up with these extra relationships, but the facts can be written in FOAF nevertheless. Similarly, if there exists a Document that has two people listed as its makers, then they are probably collaborators of some kind. Or if two people appear in 100s of digital photos together, there's a good chance they're friends and/or colleagues.

So FOAF is quite pluralistic in its approach to representing relationships between people. FOAF is built on top of a general purpose machine language for representing relationships (ie. RDF), so is quite capable of representing any kinds of relationship we care to add. The problems are generally social rather than technical; deciding on appropriate ways of describing these interconnections is a subtle art.

Perhaps the most important use of knows is, alongside the rdfs:seeAlso property, to connect FOAF files together. Taken alone, a FOAF file is somewhat dull. But linked in with 1000s of other FOAF files it becomes more interesting, with each FOAF file saying a little more about people, places, documents, things... By mentioning other people (via knows or other relationships), and by providing an rdfs:seeAlso link to their FOAF file, you can make it easy for FOAF indexing tools ('scutters') to find your FOAF and the FOAF of the people you've mentioned. And the FOAF of the people they mention, and so on. This makes it possible to build FOAF aggregators without the need for a centrally managed directory of FOAF files...

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Property: foaf:made

made - Something that was made by this agent.
Status: stable
Domain: having this property implies being a Agent
Range: every value of this property is a Thing

The made property relates a Agent to something made by it. As such it is an inverse of the maker property, which relates a thing to something that made it. See made for more details on the relationship between these FOAF terms and related Dublin Core vocabulary.

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Property: foaf:maker

maker - An agent that made this thing.
Status: stable
Domain: having this property implies being a Thing
Range: every value of this property is a Agent

The maker property relates something to a Agent that made it. As such it is an inverse of the made property.

The name (or other rdfs:label) of the maker of something can be described as the dc:creator of that thing.

For example, if the thing named by the URI http://danbri.org/ has a maker that is a Person whose name is 'Dan Brickley', we can conclude that http://danbri.org/ has a dc:creator of 'Dan Brickley'.

FOAF descriptions are encouraged to use dc:creator only for simple textual names, and to use maker to indicate creators, rather than risk confusing creators with their names. This follows most Dublin Core usage. See UsingDublinCoreCreator for details.

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Property: foaf:mbox

personal mailbox - A personal mailbox, ie. an Internet mailbox associated with exactly one owner, the first owner of this mailbox. This is a 'static inverse functional property', in that there is (across time and change) at most one individual that ever has any particular value for foaf:mbox.
Status: stable
Domain: having this property implies being a Agent
Range: every value of this property is a Thing
Inverse Functional Property

The mbox property is a relationship between the owner of a mailbox and a mailbox. These are typically identified using the mailto: URI scheme (see RFC 2368).

Note that there are many mailboxes (eg. shared ones) which are not the mbox of anyone. Furthermore, a person can have multiple mbox properties.

In FOAF, we often see mbox used as an indirect way of identifying its owner. This works even if the mailbox is itself out of service (eg. 10 years old), since the property is defined in terms of its primary owner, and doesn't require the mailbox to actually be being used for anything.

Many people are wary of sharing information about their mailbox addresses in public. To address such concerns whilst continuing the FOAF convention of indirectly identifying people by referring to widely known properties, FOAF also provides the mbox_sha1sum mechanism, which is a relationship between a person and the value you get from passing a mailbox URI to the SHA1 mathematical function.

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Property: foaf:member

member - Indicates a member of a Group
Status: stable
Domain: having this property implies being a Group
Range: every value of this property is a Agent

The member property relates a Group to a Agent that is a member of that group.

See Group for details and examples.

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Property: foaf:page

page - A page or document about this thing.
Status: stable
Domain: having this property implies being a Thing
Range: every value of this property is a Document

The page property relates a thing to a document about that thing.

As such it is an inverse of the topic property, which relates a document to a thing that the document is about.

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Property: foaf:primaryTopic

primary topic - The primary topic of some page or document.
Status: stable
Domain: having this property implies being a Document
Range: every value of this property is a Thing
Functional Property

The primaryTopic property relates a document to the main thing that the document is about.

The primaryTopic property is functional: for any document it applies to, it can have at most one value. This is useful, as it allows for data merging. In many cases it may be difficult for third parties to determine the primary topic of a document, but in a useful number of cases (eg. descriptions of movies, restaurants, politicians, ...) it should be reasonably obvious. Documents are very often the most authoritative source of information about their own primary topics, although this cannot be guaranteed since documents cannot be assumed to be accurate, honest etc.

It is an inverse of the isPrimaryTopicOf property, which relates a thing to a document primarily about that thing. The choice between these two properties is purely pragmatic. When describing documents, we use primaryTopic former to point to the things they're about. When describing things (people etc.), it is useful to be able to directly cite documents which have those things as their main topic - so we use isPrimaryTopicOf. In this way, Web sites such as Wikipedia or NNDB can provide indirect identification for the things they have descriptions of.

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Property: foaf:weblog

weblog - A weblog of some thing (whether person, group, company etc.).
Status: stable
Domain: having this property implies being a Agent
Range: every value of this property is a Document
Inverse Functional Property

The weblog property relates a Agent to a weblog of that agent.

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Property: foaf:account

account - Indicates an account held by this agent.
Status: testing
Domain: having this property implies being a Agent
Range: every value of this property is a Online Account

The account property relates a Agent to an OnlineAccount for which they are the sole account holder. See OnlineAccount for usage details.

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Property: foaf:accountName

account name - Indicates the name (identifier) associated with this online account.
Status: testing
Domain: having this property implies being a Online Account

The accountName property of a OnlineAccount is a textual representation of the account name (unique ID) associated with that account.

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Property: foaf:accountServiceHomepage

account service homepage - Indicates a homepage of the service provide for this online account.
Status: testing
Domain: having this property implies being a Online Account
Range: every value of this property is a Document

The accountServiceHomepage property indicates a relationship between a OnlineAccount and the homepage of the supporting service provider.

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Property: foaf:aimChatID

AIM chat ID - An AIM chat ID
Status: testing
Domain: having this property implies being a Agent
Inverse Functional Property

The aimChatID property relates a Agent to a textual identifier ('screenname') assigned to them in the AOL Instant Messanger (AIM) system. See AOL's AIM site for more details of AIM and AIM screennames. The iChat tools from Apple also make use of AIM identifiers.

See OnlineChatAccount (and OnlineAccount) for a more general (and verbose) mechanism for describing IM and chat accounts.

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Property: foaf:based_near

based near - A location that something is based near, for some broadly human notion of near.
Status: testing
Domain: having this property implies being a Spatial Thing
Range: every value of this property is a Spatial Thing

The based_near relationship relates two "spatial things" (anything that can be somewhere), the latter typically described using the geo:lat / geo:long geo-positioning vocabulary (See GeoInfo in the W3C semweb wiki for details). This allows us to say describe the typical latitute and longitude of, say, a Person (people are spatial things - they can be places) without implying that a precise location has been given.

We do not say much about what 'near' means in this context; it is a 'rough and ready' concept. For a more precise treatment, see GeoOnion vocab design discussions, which are aiming to produce a more sophisticated vocabulary for such purposes.

FOAF files often make use of the contact:nearestAirport property. This illustrates the distinction between FOAF documents (which may make claims using any RDF vocabulary) and the core FOAF vocabulary defined by this specification. For further reading on the use of nearestAirport see UsingContactNearestAirport in the FOAF wiki.

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Property: foaf:currentProject

current project - A current project this person works on.
Status: testing
Domain: having this property implies being a Person
Range: every value of this property is a Thing

A currentProject relates a Person to a Document indicating some collaborative or individual undertaking. This relationship indicates that the Person has some active role in the project, such as development, coordination, or support.

When a Person is no longer involved with a project, or perhaps is inactive for some time, the relationship becomes a pastProject.

If the Person has stopped working on a project because it has been completed (successfully or otherwise), pastProject is applicable. In general, currentProject is used to indicate someone's current efforts (and implied interests, concerns etc.), while pastProject describes what they've previously been doing.

Note that this property requires further work. There has been confusion about whether it points to a thing (eg. something you've made; a homepage for a project, ie. a Document or to instances of the class Project, which might themselves have a homepage. In practice, it seems to have been used in a similar way to interest, referencing homepages of ongoing projects.

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Property: foaf:depiction

depiction - A depiction of some thing.
Status: testing
Domain: having this property implies being a Thing
Range: every value of this property is a Image

The depiction property is a relationship between a thing and an Image that depicts it. As such it is an inverse of the depicts relationship.

A common use of depiction (and depicts) is to indicate the contents of a digital image, for example the people or objects represented in an online photo gallery.

Extensions to this basic idea include 'Co-Depiction' (social networks as evidenced in photos), as well as richer photo metadata through the mechanism of using SVG paths to indicate the regions of an image which depict some particular thing. See 'Annotating Images With SVG' for tools and details.

The basic notion of 'depiction' could also be extended to deal with multimedia content (video clips, audio), or refined to deal with corner cases, such as pictures of pictures etc.

The depiction property is a super-property of the more specific property img, which is used more sparingly. You stand in a depiction relation to any Image that depicts you, whereas img is typically used to indicate a few images that are particularly representative.

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Property: foaf:depicts

depicts - A thing depicted in this representation.
Status: testing
Domain: having this property implies being a Image
Range: every value of this property is a Thing

The depicts property is a relationship between a Image and something that the image depicts. As such it is an inverse of the depiction relationship. See depiction for further notes.

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Property: foaf:familyName

familyName - The family name of some person.
Status: testing
Domain: having this property implies being a Person

The familyName property is provided (alongside givenName) for use when describing parts of people's names. Although these concepts do not capture the full range of personal naming styles found world-wide, they are commonly used and have some value.

There is also a simple name property.

Support is also provided for the more archaic and culturally varying terminology of firstName and lastName.

See the issue tracker for design discussions, status and ongoing work on rationalising the FOAF naming machinery.

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Property: foaf:firstName

firstName - The first name of a person.
Status: testing
Domain: having this property implies being a Person

The firstName property is provided (alongside lastName) as a mechanism to support legacy data that cannot be easily interpreted in terms of the (otherwise preferred) familyName and givenName properties. The concepts of 'first' and 'last' names do not work well across cultural and linguistic boundaries; however they are widely used in addressbooks and databases.

See the issue tracker for design discussions, status and ongoing work on rationalising the FOAF naming machinery.

There is also a simple name property.

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Property: foaf:focus

focus - The underlying or 'focal' entity associated with some SKOS-described concept.
Status: testing
Domain: having this property implies being a Concept
Range: every value of this property is a Thing

The focus property relates a conceptualisation of something to the thing itself. Specifically, it is designed for use with W3C's SKOS vocabulary, to help indicate specific individual things (typically people, places, artifacts) that are mentioned in different SKOS schemes (eg. thesauri).

W3C SKOS is based around collections of linked 'concepts', which indicate topics, subject areas and categories. In SKOS, properties of a skos:Concept are properties of the conceptualization (see 2005 discussion for details); for example administrative and record-keeping metadata. Two schemes might have an entry for the same individual; the foaf:focus property can be used to indicate the thing in they world that they both focus on. Many SKOS concepts don't work this way; broad topical areas and subject categories don't typically correspond to some particular entity. However, in cases when they do, it is useful to link both subject-oriented and thing-oriented information via foaf:focus.

FOAF's focus property works alongside its other topic-oriented constructs: topic, primaryTopic are used when talking about the topical emphasis of a document. The notion of primaryTopic is particularly important in FOAF as it provides an indirect mechanism for identifying things indirectly. A similar approach is explored by the TDB URI scheme. FOAF includes topic-oriented functionality to address its original goals of linking people to information, as well as to other people, through the use of linked information.

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Property: foaf:gender

gender - The gender of this Agent (typically but not necessarily 'male' or 'female').
Status: testing
Domain: having this property implies being a Agent
Functional Property

The gender property relates a Agent (typically a Person) to a string representing its gender. In most cases the value will be the string 'female' or 'male' (in lowercase without surrounding quotes or spaces). Like all FOAF properties, there is in general no requirement to use gender in any particular document or description. Values other than 'male' and 'female' may be used, but are not enumerated here. The gender mechanism is not intended to capture the full variety of biological, social and sexual concepts associated with the word 'gender'.

Anything that has a gender property will be some kind of Agent. However there are kinds of Agent to which the concept of gender isn't applicable (eg. a Group). FOAF does not currently include a class corresponding directly to "the type of thing that has a gender". At any point in time, a Agent has at most one value for gender. FOAF does not treat gender as a static property; the same individual may have different values for this property at different times.

Note that FOAF's notion of gender isn't defined biologically or anatomically - this would be tricky since we have a broad notion that applies to all Agents (including robots - eg. Bender from Futurama is 'male'). As stressed above, FOAF's notion of gender doesn't attempt to encompass the full range of concepts associated with human gender, biology and sexuality. As such it is a (perhaps awkward) compromise between the clinical and the social/psychological. In general, a person will be the best authority on their gender. Feedback on this design is particularly welcome (via the FOAF mailing list, foaf-dev). We have tried to be respectful of diversity without attempting to catalogue or enumerate that diversity.

This may also be a good point for a periodic reminder: as with all FOAF properties, documents that use 'gender' will on occassion be innacurate, misleading or outright false. FOAF, like all open means of communication, supports lying. Application authors using FOAF data should always be cautious in their presentation of unverified information, but be particularly sensitive to issues and risks surrounding sex and gender (including privacy and personal safety concerns). Designers of FOAF-based user interfaces should be careful to allow users to omit gender when describing themselves and others, and to allow at least for values other than 'male' and 'female' as options. Users of information conveyed via FOAF (as via information conveyed through mobile phone text messages, email, Internet chat, HTML pages etc.) should be skeptical of unverified information.

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Property: foaf:givenName

Given name - The given name of some person.
Status: testing

The givenName property is provided (alongside familyName) for use when describing parts of people's names. Although these concepts do not capture the full range of personal naming styles found world-wide, they are commonly used and have some value.

There is also a simple name property.

Support is also provided for the more archaic and culturally varying terminology of firstName and lastName.

See the issue tracker for design discussions, status and ongoing work on rationalising the FOAF naming machinery.

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Property: foaf:icqChatID

ICQ chat ID - An ICQ chat ID
Status: testing
Domain: having this property implies being a Agent
Inverse Functional Property

The icqChatID property relates a Agent to a textual identifier assigned to them in the ICQ Chat system. See the icq chat site for more details of the 'icq' service. Their "What is ICQ?" document provides a basic overview, while their "About Us page notes that ICQ has been acquired by AOL. Despite the relationship with AOL, ICQ is at the time of writing maintained as a separate identity from the AIM brand (see aimChatID).

See OnlineChatAccount (and OnlineAccount) for a more general (and verbose) mechanism for describing IM and chat accounts.

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Property: foaf:img

image - An image that can be used to represent some thing (ie. those depictions which are particularly representative of something, eg. one's photo on a homepage).
Status: testing
Domain: having this property implies being a Person
Range: every value of this property is a Image

The img property relates a Person to a Image that represents them. Unlike its super-property depiction, we only use img when an image is particularly representative of some person. The analogy is with the image(s) that might appear on someone's homepage, rather than happen to appear somewhere in their photo album.

Unlike the more general depiction property (and its inverse, depicts), the img property is only used with representations of people (ie. instances of Person). So you can't use it to find pictures of cats, dogs etc. The basic idea is to have a term whose use is more restricted than depiction so we can have a useful way of picking out a reasonable image to represent someone. FOAF defines img as a sub-property of depiction, which means that the latter relationship is implied whenever two things are related by the former.

Note that img does not have any restrictions on the dimensions, colour depth, format etc of the Image it references.

Terminology: note that img is a property (ie. relationship), and that code:Image is a similarly named class (ie. category, a type of thing). It might have been more helpful to call img 'mugshot' or similar; instead it is named by analogy to the HTML IMG element.

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Property: foaf:interest

interest - A page about a topic of interest to this person.
Status: testing
Domain: having this property implies being a Agent
Range: every value of this property is a Document

The interest property represents an interest of a Agent, through indicating a Document whose topic(s) broadly characterises that interest.

For example, we might claim that a person or group has an interest in RDF by saying they stand in a interest relationship to the RDF home page. Loosly, such RDF would be saying "this agent is interested in the topic of this page".

Uses of interest include a variety of filtering and resource discovery applications. It could be used, for example, to help find answers to questions such as "Find me members of this organisation with an interest in XML who have also contributed to CPAN)".

This approach to characterising interests is intended to compliment other mechanisms (such as the use of controlled vocabulary). It allows us to use a widely known set of unique identifiers (Web page URIs) with minimal pre-coordination. Since URIs have a controlled syntax, this makes data merging much easier than the use of free-text characterisations of interest.

Note that interest does not imply expertise, and that this FOAF term provides no support for characterising levels of interest: passing fads and lifelong quests are both examples of someone's interest. Describing interests in full is a complex undertaking; interest provides one basic component of FOAF's approach to these problems.

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Property: foaf:jabberID

jabber ID - A jabber ID for something.
Status: testing
Domain: having this property implies being a Agent
Inverse Functional Property

The jabberID property relates a Agent to a textual identifier assigned to them in the Jabber messaging system. See the Jabber site for more information about the Jabber protocols and tools.

Jabber, unlike several other online messaging systems, is based on an open, publically documented protocol specification, and has a variety of open source implementations. Jabber IDs can be assigned to a variety of kinds of thing, including software 'bots', chat rooms etc. For the purposes of FOAF, these are all considered to be kinds of Agent (ie. things that do stuff). The uses of Jabber go beyond simple IM chat applications. The jabberID property is provided as a basic hook to help support RDF description of Jabber users and services.

See OnlineChatAccount (and OnlineAccount) for a more general (and verbose) mechanism for describing IM and chat accounts.

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Property: foaf:lastName

lastName - The last name of a person.
Status: testing
Domain: having this property implies being a Person

The lastName property is provided (alongside firstName) as a mechanism to support legacy data that cannot be easily interpreted in terms of the (otherwise preferred) familyName and givenName properties. The concepts of 'first' and 'last' names do not work well across cultural and linguistic boundaries; however they are widely used in addressbooks and databases.

See the issue tracker for design discussions, status and ongoing work on rationalising the FOAF naming machinery.

There is also a simple name property.

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Property: foaf:mbox_sha1sum

sha1sum of a personal mailbox URI name - The sha1sum of the URI of an Internet mailbox associated with exactly one owner, the first owner of the mailbox.
Status: testing
Domain: having this property implies being a Agent
Inverse Functional Property

A mbox_sha1sum of a Person is a textual representation of the result of applying the SHA1 mathematical functional to a 'mailto:' identifier (URI) for an Internet mailbox that they stand in a mbox relationship to.

In other words, if you have a mailbox (mbox) but don't want to reveal its address, you can take that address and generate a mbox_sha1sum representation of it. Just as a mbox can be used as an indirect identifier for its owner, we can do the same with mbox_sha1sum since there is only one Person with any particular value for that property.

Many FOAF tools use mbox_sha1sum in preference to exposing mailbox information. This is usually for privacy and SPAM-avoidance reasons. Other relevant techniques include the use of PGP encryption (see Edd Dumbill's documentation) and the use of FOAF-based whitelists for mail filtering.

Code examples for SHA1 in C#, Java, PHP, Perl and Python can be found in Sam Ruby's weblog entry. Remember to include the 'mailto:' prefix, but no trailing whitespace, when computing a mbox_sha1sum property.

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Property: foaf:msnChatID

MSN chat ID - An MSN chat ID
Status: testing
Domain: having this property implies being a Agent
Inverse Functional Property

The msnChatID property relates a Agent to a textual identifier assigned to them in the Microsoft online chat system originally known as 'MSN', and now Windows Live Messenger. See the Microsoft mesenger and Windows Live ID sites for more details.

See OnlineChatAccount (and OnlineAccount) for a more general (and verbose) mechanism for describing IM and chat accounts.

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Property: foaf:myersBriggs

myersBriggs - A Myers Briggs (MBTI) personality classification.
Status: testing
Domain: having this property implies being a Person

The myersBriggs property represents the Myers Briggs (MBTI) approach to personality taxonomy. It is included in FOAF as an example of a property that takes certain constrained values, and to give some additional detail to the FOAF files of those who choose to include it. The myersBriggs property applies only to the Person class; wherever you see it, you can infer it is being applied to a person.

The myersBriggs property is interesting in that it illustrates how FOAF can serve as a carrier for various kinds of information, without necessarily being commited to any associated worldview. Not everyone will find myersBriggs (or star signs, or blood types, or the four humours) a useful perspective on human behaviour and personality. The inclusion of a Myers Briggs property doesn't indicate that FOAF endorses the underlying theory, any more than the existence of weblog is an endorsement of soapboxes.

The values for myersBriggs are the following 16 4-letter textual codes: ESTJ, INFP, ESFP, INTJ, ESFJ, INTP, ENFP, ISTJ, ESTP, INFJ, ENFJ, ISTP, ENTJ, ISFP, ENTP, ISFJ. If multiple of these properties are applicable, they are represented by applying multiple properties to a person.

For further reading on MBTI, see various online sources (eg. this article). There are various online sites which offer quiz-based tools for determining a person's MBTI classification. The owners of the MBTI trademark have probably not approved of these.

This FOAF property suggests some interesting uses, some of which could perhaps be used to test the claims made by proponents of the MBTI (eg. an analysis of weblog postings filtered by MBTI type). However it should be noted that MBTI FOAF descriptions are self-selecting; MBTI categories may not be uniformly appealing to the people they describe. Further, there is probably a degree of cultural specificity implicit in the assumptions made by many questionaire-based MBTI tools; the MBTI system may not make sense in cultural settings beyond those it was created for.

See also Cory Caplinger's summary table or the RDFWeb article, FOAF Myers Briggs addition for further background and examples.

Note: Myers Briggs Type Indicator and MBTI are registered trademarks of Consulting Psychologists Press Inc. Oxford Psycholgists Press Ltd has exclusive rights to the trademark in the UK.

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Property: foaf:name

name - A name for some thing.
Status: testing
Domain: having this property implies being a Thing

The name of something is a simple textual string.

XML language tagging may be used to indicate the language of the name. For example:

<foaf:name xml:lang="en">Dan Brickley</foaf:name>

FOAF provides some other naming constructs. While foaf:name does not explicitly represent name substructure (family vs given etc.) it does provide a basic level of interoperability. See the issue tracker for status of work on this issue.

The name property, like all RDF properties with a range of rdfs:Literal, may be used with XMLLiteral datatyped values (multiple names are acceptable whether they are in the same langauge or not). XMLLiteral usage is not yet widely adopted. Feedback on this aspect of the FOAF design is particularly welcomed.

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Property: foaf:nick

nickname - A short informal nickname characterising an agent (includes login identifiers, IRC and other chat nicknames).
Status: testing

The nick property relates a Person to a short (often abbreviated) nickname, such as those use in IRC chat, online accounts, and computer logins.

This property is necessarily vague, because it does not indicate any particular naming control authority, and so cannot distinguish a person's login from their (possibly various) IRC nicknames or other similar identifiers. However it has some utility, since many people use the same string (or slight variants) across a variety of such environments.

For specific controlled sets of names (relating primarily to Instant Messanger accounts), FOAF provides some convenience properties: jabberID, aimChatID, msnChatID and icqChatID. Beyond this, the problem of representing such accounts is not peculiar to Instant Messanging, and it is not scaleable to attempt to enumerate each naming database as a distinct FOAF property. The OnlineAccount term (and supporting vocabulary) are provided as a more verbose and more expressive generalisation of these properties.

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Property: foaf:openid

openid - An OpenID for an Agent.
Status: testing
Domain: having this property implies being a Agent
Range: every value of this property is a Document
Inverse Functional Property

A openid is a property of a Agent that associates it with a document that can be used as an indirect identifier in the manner of the OpenID "Identity URL". As the OpenID 1.1 specification notes, OpenID itself"does not provide any mechanism to exchange profile information, though Consumers of an Identity can learn more about an End User from any public, semantically interesting documents linked thereunder (FOAF, RSS, Atom, vCARD, etc.)". In this way, FOAF and OpenID complement each other; neither provides a stand-alone approach to online "trust", but combined they can address interesting parts of this larger problem space.

The openid property is "inverse functional", meaning that anything that is the foaf:openid of something, is the openid of no more than one thing. FOAF is agnostic as to whether there are (according to the relevant OpenID specifications) OpenID URIs that are equally associated with multiple Agents. FOAF offers sub-classes of Agent, ie. Organization and Group, that allow for such scenarios to be consistent with the notion that any foaf:openid is the foaf:openid of just one Agent.

FOAF does not mandate any particular URI scheme for use as openid values. The OpenID 1.1 specification includes a delegation model that is often used to allow a weblog or homepage document to also serve in OpenID authentication via "link rel" HTML markup. This deployment model provides a convenient connection to FOAF, since a similar technique is used for FOAF autodiscovery in HTML. A single document can, for example, serve both as a homepage and an OpenID identity URL.

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Property: foaf:pastProject

past project - A project this person has previously worked on.
Status: testing
Domain: having this property implies being a Person
Range: every value of this property is a Thing

After a Person is no longer involved with a currentProject, or has been inactive for some time, a pastProject relationship can be used. This indicates that the Person was involved with the described project at one point.

If the Person has stopped working on a project because it has been completed (successfully or otherwise), pastProject is applicable. In general, currentProject is used to indicate someone's current efforts (and implied interests, concerns etc.), while pastProject describes what they've previously been doing.

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Property: foaf:phone

phone - A phone, specified using fully qualified tel: URI scheme (refs: http://www.w3.org/Addressing/schemes.html#tel).
Status: testing

The phone of something is a phone, typically identified using the tel: URI scheme.

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Property: foaf:plan

plan - A .plan comment, in the tradition of finger and '.plan' files.
Status: testing
Domain: having this property implies being a Person

The plan property provides a space for a Person to hold some arbitrary content that would appear in a traditional '.plan' file. The plan file was stored in a user's home directory on a UNIX machine, and displayed to people when the user was queried with the finger utility.

A plan file could contain anything. Typical uses included brief comments, thoughts, or remarks on what a person had been doing lately. Plan files were also prone to being witty or simply osbscure. Others may be more creative, writing any number of seemingly random compositions in their plan file for people to stumble upon.

See History of the Finger Protocol by Rajiv Shah for more on this piece of Internet history. The geekcode property may also be of interest.

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Property: foaf:publications

publications - A link to the publications of this person.
Status: testing
Domain: having this property implies being a Person
Range: every value of this property is a Document

The publications property indicates a Document listing (primarily in human-readable form) some publications associated with the Person. Such documents are typically published alongside one's homepage.

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Property: foaf:schoolHomepage

schoolHomepage - A homepage of a school attended by the person.
Status: testing
Domain: having this property implies being a Person
Range: every value of this property is a Document

The schoolHomepage property relates a Person to a Document that is the homepage of a School that the person attended.

FOAF does not (currently) define a class for 'School' (if it did, it would probably be as a sub-class of Organization). The original application area for schoolHomepage was for 'schools' in the British-English sense; however American-English usage has dominated, and it is now perfectly reasonable to describe Universities, Colleges and post-graduate study using schoolHomepage.

This very basic facility provides a basis for a low-cost, decentralised approach to classmate-reunion and suchlike. Instead of requiring a central database, we can use FOAF to express claims such as 'I studied here' simply by mentioning a school's homepage within FOAF files. Given the homepage of a school, it is easy for FOAF aggregators to lookup this property in search of people who attended that school.

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Property: foaf:skypeID

Skype ID - A Skype ID
Status: testing
Domain: having this property implies being a Agent

The skype property relates a Agent to an account name of a Skype account of theirs.

See OnlineChatAccount (and OnlineAccount) for a more general (and verbose) mechanism for describing IM and chat accounts.

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Property: foaf:thumbnail

thumbnail - A derived thumbnail image.
Status: testing
Domain: having this property implies being a Image
Range: every value of this property is a Image

The thumbnail property is a relationship between a full-size Image and a smaller, representative Image that has been derrived from it.

It is typical in FOAF to express img and depiction relationships in terms of the larger, 'main' (in some sense) image, rather than its thumbnail(s). A thumbnail might be clipped or otherwise reduced such that it does not depict everything that the full image depicts. Therefore FOAF does not specify that a thumbnail depicts everything that the image it is derrived from depicts. However, FOAF does expect that anything depicted in the thumbnail will also be depicted in the source image.

A thumbnail is typically small enough that it can be loaded and viewed quickly before a viewer decides to download the larger version. They are often used in online photo gallery applications.

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Property: foaf:tipjar

tipjar - A tipjar document for this agent, describing means for payment and reward.
Status: testing
Domain: having this property implies being a Agent
Range: every value of this property is a Document

The tipjar property relates an Agent to a Document that describes some mechanisms for paying or otherwise rewarding that agent.

The tipjar property was created following discussions about simple, lightweight mechanisms that could be used to encourage rewards and payment for content exchanged online. An agent's tipjar page(s) could describe informal ("Send me a postcard!", "here's my book, music and movie wishlist") or formal (machine-readable micropayment information) information about how that agent can be paid or rewarded. The reward is not associated with any particular action or content from the agent concerned. A link to a service such as PayPal is the sort of thing we might expect to find in a tipjar document.

Note that the value of a tipjar property is just a document (which can include anchors into HTML pages). We expect, but do not currently specify, that this will evolve into a hook for finding more machine-readable information to support payments, rewards. The OnlineAccount machinery is also relevant, although the information requirements for automating payments are not currently clear.

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Property: foaf:title

title - Title (Mr, Mrs, Ms, Dr. etc)
Status: testing

This property is a candidate for deprecation in favour of 'honorificPrefix' following Portable Contacts usage. See the FOAF Issue Tracker.

The approriate values for title are not formally constrained, and will vary across community and context. Values such as 'Mr', 'Mrs', 'Ms', 'Dr' etc. are expected.

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Property: foaf:topic

topic - A topic of some page or document.
Status: testing
Domain: having this property implies being a Document
Range: every value of this property is a Thing

The topic property relates a document to a thing that the document is about.

As such it is an inverse of the page property, which relates a thing to a document about that thing.

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Property: foaf:topic_interest

topic_interest - A thing of interest to this person.
Status: testing
Domain: having this property implies being a Agent
Range: every value of this property is a Thing

The topic_interest property links a Agent to a thing that they're interested in. Unlike topic it is not indirected through a document, but links the thing directly.

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Property: foaf:workInfoHomepage

work info homepage - A work info homepage of some person; a page about their work for some organization.
Status: testing
Domain: having this property implies being a Person
Range: every value of this property is a Document

The workInfoHomepage of a Person is a Document that describes their work. It is generally (but not necessarily) a different document from their homepage, and from any workplaceHomepage(s) they may have.

The purpose of this property is to distinguish those pages you often see, which describe someone's professional role within an organisation or project. These aren't really homepages, although they share some characterstics.

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Property: foaf:workplaceHomepage

workplace homepage - A workplace homepage of some person; the homepage of an organization they work for.
Status: testing
Domain: having this property implies being a Person
Range: every value of this property is a Document

The workplaceHomepage of a Person is a Document that is the homepage of a Organization that they work for.

By directly relating people to the homepages of their workplace, we have a simple convention that takes advantage of a set of widely known identifiers, while taking care not to confuse the things those identifiers identify (ie. organizational homepages) with the actual organizations those homepages describe.

For example, Dan Brickley works at W3C. Dan is a Person with a homepage of http://danbri.org/; W3C is a Organization with a homepage of http://www.w3.org/. This allows us to say that Dan has a workplaceHomepage of http://www.w3.org/.

<foaf:Person>
 <foaf:name>Dan Brickley</foaf:name>
 <foaf:workplaceHomepage rdf:resource="http://www.w3.org/"/>
</foaf:Person>

Note that several other FOAF properties work this way; schoolHomepage is the most similar. In general, FOAF often indirectly identifies things via Web page identifiers where possible, since these identifiers are widely used and known. FOAF does not currently have a term for the name of the relation (eg. "workplace") that holds between a Person and an Organization that they work for.

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Property: foaf:yahooChatID

Yahoo chat ID - A Yahoo chat ID
Status: testing
Domain: having this property implies being a Agent
Inverse Functional Property

The yahooChatID property relates a Agent to a textual identifier assigned to them in the Yahoo online Chat system. See Yahoo's the Yahoo! Chat site for more details of their service. Yahoo chat IDs are also used across several other Yahoo services, including email and Yahoo! Groups.

See OnlineChatAccount (and OnlineAccount) for a more general (and verbose) mechanism for describing IM and chat accounts.

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Property: foaf:age

age - The age in years of some agent.
Status: unstable
Domain: having this property implies being a Agent
Functional Property

The age property is a relationship between a Agent and an integer string representing their age in years. See also birthday.

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Property: foaf:birthday

birthday - The birthday of this Agent, represented in mm-dd string form, eg. '12-31'.
Status: unstable
Domain: having this property implies being a Agent
Functional Property

The birthday property is a relationship between a Agent and a string representing the month and day in which they were born (Gregorian calendar). See BirthdayIssue for details of related properties that can be used to describe such things in more flexible ways.

See also age.

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Property: foaf:membershipClass

membershipClass - Indicates the class of individuals that are a member of a Group
Status: unstable

The membershipClass property relates a Group to an RDF class representing a sub-class of Agent whose instances are all the agents that are a member of the Group.

See Group for details and examples.

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Property: foaf:sha1

sha1sum (hex) - A sha1sum hash, in hex.
Status: unstable
Domain: having this property implies being a Document

The sha1 property relates a Document to the textual form of a SHA1 hash of (some representation of) its contents.

The design for this property is neither complete nor coherent. The Document class is currently used in a way that allows multiple instances at different URIs to have the 'same' contents (and hence hash). If sha1 is an owl:InverseFunctionalProperty, we could deduce that several such documents were the self-same thing. A more careful design is needed, which distinguishes documents in a broad sense from byte sequences.

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Property: foaf:status

status - A string expressing what the user is happy for the general public (normally) to know about their current activity.
Status: unstable
Domain: having this property implies being a Agent

status is a short textual string expressing what the user is happy for the general public (normally) to know about their current activity. mood, location, etc.

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Property: foaf:dnaChecksum

DNA checksum - A checksum for the DNA of some thing. Joke.
Status: archaic

The dnaChecksum property is mostly a joke, but also a reminder that there will be lots of different identifying properties for people, some of which we might find disturbing.

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Property: foaf:family_name

family_name - The family name of some person.
Status: archaic
Domain: having this property implies being a Person

This property is considered an archaic spelling of familyName.

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Property: foaf:fundedBy

funded by - An organization funding a project or person.
Status: archaic
Domain: having this property implies being a Thing
Range: every value of this property is a Thing

The fundedBy property relates something to something else that has provided funding for it.

This property is tentatively considered archaic usage, unless we hear about positive implementation experience.

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Property: foaf:geekcode

geekcode - A textual geekcode for this person, see http://www.geekcode.com/geek.html
Status: archaic
Domain: having this property implies being a Person

The geekcode property is used to represent a 'Geek Code' for some Person.

See the Wikipedia entry for details of the code, which provides a somewhat frivolous and willfully obscure mechanism for characterising technical expertise, interests and habits. The geekcode property is not bound to any particular version of the code.

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Property: foaf:givenname

Given name - The given name of some person.
Status: archaic

The givenName property is provided (alongside familyName) for use when describing parts of people's names. Although these concepts do not capture the full range of personal naming styles found world-wide, they are commonly used and have some value.

There is also a simple name property.

Support is also provided for the more archaic and culturally varying terminology of firstName and lastName.

See the issue tracker for design discussions, status and ongoing work on rationalising the FOAF naming machinery.

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Property: foaf:holdsAccount

account - Indicates an account held by this agent.
Status: archaic
Domain: having this property implies being a Agent
Range: every value of this property is a Online Account

This property is considered archaic usage. It is generally better to use account instead.

The holdsAccount property relates a Agent to an OnlineAccount for which they are the sole account holder. See OnlineAccount for usage details.

This property is equivalent to the account property, which was introduced primarily to provide simpler naming for the same idea.

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Property: foaf:surname

Surname - The surname of some person.
Status: archaic
Domain: having this property implies being a Person

A number of naming constructs are under development to provide naming substructure; draft properties include firstName, givenName, and surname. These are not currently stable or consistent; see the issue tracker for design discussions, status and ongoing work on rationalising the FOAF naming machinery.

There is also a simple name property.

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Property: foaf:theme

theme - A theme.
Status: archaic
Domain: having this property implies being a Thing
Range: every value of this property is a Thing

This property is considered archaic usage, and is not currently recommended for usage.

The theme property is rarely used and under-specified. The intention was to use it to characterise interest / themes associated with projects and groups. Further work is needed to meet these goals.

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External Vocabulary References

The description of the terms in the FOAF 'dictionary' often make reference to classes and properties elsewhere. This section of the FOAF specification provides a placeholder reference for any FOAF mention of externally defined terms. For example, sometimes we might say that FOAF property has a domain or range of an externally defined class, or that a FOAF class is a sub-class of an external class, or 'disjoint with' such a class (ie. has no common members). Such claims help fix the intended meaning of FOAF terms in relationship to other 'peer' vocabularies.

Status Vocabulary

Each term in FOAF is annotated with properties from the SemWeb Vocab Status Ontology

This was created as an experiment in documenting FOAF's term-centric versioning model, in which a common fixed namespace URI is used, while term definitions slowly and independently evolve through different stability levels. This contrasts with other approaches to versioning which attach versioning information to larger sets of terms.

Note that this mechanism is itself somewhat experimental and evolvin. The definitions of 'stable', 'unstable', 'archaic' and 'testing' cannot be defined as global absolutes, but only in relationship to the practices, expectations and social structures around some vocabulary. For their use in FOAF, future versions of this specification could usefully offer more detail about what to expect from a term labelled 'stable'.

vs:term_status
The vs:term_status property indicates the status of a vocabulary term, one of 'stable','unstable','testing' or 'archaic'.

W3C Basic Geo (WGS84 lat/long) Vocabulary

Members of the FOAF and W3C Semantic Web Interest Group communities collaborated in 2003 to create a very simple vocabulary that described points in geographic space. This is the W3CBasic Geo Vocabulary. It assumes use of the WGS84 reference system and defines properties geo:lat, geo:long and geo:alt in terms of a class geo:SpatialThing.

The foaf:based_near property relates a spatial thing (typically a foaf:Agent of some kind) to another spatial thing, which can be described using geo:lat, geo:long etc.

RDF Vocabulary Description - core concepts

The FOAF dictionary of terms is defined using a family of W3C standards: RDF, RDF Schema and OWL. These share a data model and general approach, and provide for increasing levels of expressivity. Here we introduce the core OWL and RDF/S terms used directly in the machine-readable description of FOAF. See W3C's site for the latest and most authoritative OWL and RDF specifications.

FOAF is based on the exchange of free-form descriptions that are structured in terms of things having properties, where the value of each property is expressed as either textually (eg. a name or number), or by reference to another thing. FOAF (as an application of RDF) uses URI identifiers wherever possible to talk about things of interest, whether they are Web pages, classes of thing, properties of things, or even people. See the W3C Web Architecture specification for more background on URIs.

From core RDF, FOAF takes the notion that we are talking about things, and they fall into categories; we call these 'classes'. The core machinery we use from the RDF Schema and OWL technologies simply give us some built-in terminology for talking about things, classes and properties. Here we introduce some of these and discuss briefly how they relate to FOAF's approach to describing things.

owl:Thing
OWL introduces the class 'Thing' as a name for the universal class of all things. This is sometimes useful when we want to express universality of property use, eg. that anything can be the value of foaf:depicts.
rdf:Property
RDF has a built-in class called rdf:Property. This is the class of all things like foaf:homepage or dc:creator which define named kinds of relationship between pairs of things, or between things and textually-expressed information.
owl:DatatypeProperty
The OWL specifications give a name for those properties whose values are textually-expressed: "DataTypeProperty". RDF allows these to be either plain literal values (these can also carry an indicator of their language, via xml:lang), or else "data-typed", which means they are marked with a URI indicating their type (but no language tagging).
owl:ObjectProperty
ObjectProperty is OWL's name for those properties which are not textually-expressed; instead, they are used when mentioning or referring to some other thing. OWL encourages vocabularies to avoid using a single named property in both 'ObjectProperty' and 'DataTypeProperty' styles. However earlier usage, notably in the Dublin Core community, does just this. Each FOAF property is either an Object Property or DataType Property.
rdf:type
One of the most commonly used built-in relationships in RDF is 'type'. RDF type relates something to a class that it is in.
rdfs:subClassOf
RDFS gives a name for the relationship between some specific class and its more general superclass: 'subClassOf'. It would have perhaps been simpler if this was called 'superProperty'. So for example we say that foaf:Person has an rdfs:subClassOf property whose value is foaf:Agent.
rdfs:Class
RDFS gives the name 'Class' to those things that represent classes of thing, ie. which are values of rdf:type for their members. The OWL language also (for technical reasons) defines owl:Class for essentially the same notion. OWL also includes powerful machinery for defining the membership rules for classes. This is not heavily used in FOAF, beyond the experimental mechanisms associated with foaf:Group.
rdfs:subClassOf
RDFS gives a name for the relationship between some particular class and its more general superclass: 'subClassOf'. It would have perhaps been simpler if this was called 'superProperty'. So for example we say that foaf:Person has a subPropertyOf property whose value is foaf:Agent.
rdfs:subPropertyOf
Similar to subClassOf but for hierarchies of properties, we can use rdfs:subPropertyOf to point to a more general super-property, for example we say foaf:aimChatID rdfs:subPropertyOf foaf:nick.
rdfs:domain
The RDFS specification introduced the notion of a property's domain. This is a way of saying, for some property, something about the kind of classes it is used with. If you know the domain or domains for some property, you know that whenever you see that property applied to something, then that thing ought to be a member of those classes. Note that this does not mean that every description using the property is compelled to mention all those classes, just that the meaning of the property implies also the type of the thing the property is applied to.
rdfs:range
RDFS also defines a property of properties called 'range'; this works just like rdfs:domain, except for the values of a property. If you know the range of some property, you know what kinds of thing are reasonable values for it.
owl:FunctionalProperty
OWL provides even more useful information about properties, such as the ability to say that a property is 'functional'. This means simply that for any particular thing, you can expect at most one value for that property. It is simplest to think of this as contextualised to any given time; although OWL doesn't talk about time explicitly. So we might say that 'age' is functional, even though a series of FOAF documents might be published, each truthfully giving different values for my 'age' which made sense in their original context. At the time of writing, the only W3C technology that can take a larger perspective on such different perspectives / views (or 'graphs') is SPARQL. If you have two different values for a given functional property, you know you have a problem; perhaps one is out-of-date, for example. Or perhaps they only differ in trivial detail (eg. date syntax, whitespace).
owl:InverseFunctionalProperty
OWL also gives a name for properties where common values tell us something about the identity of the thing having the property. On the Web this can be very useful. OWL tells us that two descriptions are of the same thing, if they include truthful mention of some 'inverse functional property' that has the same value. The classic FOAF example could be two mentions of a person having some particular foaf:homepage. This OWL construct is very useful for reasoning about identity and merging scattered and partial descriptions.
owl:inverseOf
OWL provides a property 'inverseOf' that holds between inverse properties; for example, any two things related by foaf:maker are related in the reverse direction by foaf:made.
owl:disjointWith
OWL also lets us indicate that two classes have no common members. This can be useful for clarifying modelling assumptions in a language-neutral manner; eg. we might ask whether anything can be both a foaf:Group and a foaf:Organization simultaneously.
owl:sameAs
OWL provides a term for talking about identity in the sense of "being one and the same thing as". Many FOAF constructs imply that two seemingly different things are in fact mentions of the self-same real world entity; this can be written out explicitly using owl:sameAs. For example, if two FOAF descriptions give URI identifiers http://example.com/foo#person1 and http://example.org/bar#person2 in two person-descriptions, but ascribe the same homepage URI, we can conclude that person1 is owl:sameAs person2 (and vice-versa). This construct provides a powerful mechanism for decentralised, linked data.
skos:Concept
W3C provides a rich framework for describing linked topics, SKOS. FOAF defines a small extension to SKOS called foaf:focus designed to link conceptualisations of entities to more linked data (eg. in FOAF) about the specific thing a SKOS "Concept" is about. 'Concept' is SKOS's fundamental class, and corresponds to abstractions common in library and cultural heritage information systems, including thesauri and subject indexing schemes.

Dublin Core terms

The Dublin Core specification provides term definitions that focus on issues of resource discovery, document description and related concepts useful for cultural heritage and digital library applications. FOAF can be used alongside any variants of Dublin Core, but works most effectively with the most modern Dublin Core terms namespace. Note that here we use the prefix 'dct:' to stand for the DC Terms namespace; however it is not unusual to see 'dc' also used.

dct:Agent
Dublin Core's notion of Agent is much like FOAF's; Dublin Core says "A resource that acts or has the power to act.", we say "things that do stuff". As nobody has provided a counter-example of something fitting one definition but not the other, we say here that foaf:Agent stands in an 'equivalent class' relationship to dct:Agent (and vice-versa).
dct:creator
The notion of 'creator' in the latest versions of Dublin Core matches FOAF's notion of 'maker'; based on their definitions, every pair of things that are related by one of those properties are also related by the other. We express this by saying that these properties stand in an 'equivalent property' relationship' to one another.

Wordnet terms

Earlier versions of this specification used an experimental companion namespace produced from the lexical database Wordnet (v1.6). This is currently offline, and corresponding sub-class relationships have been ommited from the FOAF documentation. More recent RDF representations of Wordnet now exist, however they don't map Wordnet synsets to classes, so can't be directly used here. Future versions of this specification might restore links to some version of Wordnet in RDF.

SIOC terms

Many terms in the SIOC vocabulary are defined with reference to FOAF. See the SIOC project for details. Future versions of this specification may provide more information here.

Acknowledgments

There are far too many people who have contributed to the FOAF project to name everyone in this early-release of the new improved spec. FOAF wouldn't be such a fun project or be as widely known as it is today without the efforts, enthusiasm and intelligence of the folks who have contributed via the rdfweb-dev list, #foaf IRC channel, and wiki.

That said, a few milestones in FOAF's history should be mentioned. We owe particular thanks to Edd Dumbill for his IBM developerWorks articles (which attracted the affections of the Weblogging crowd) and for his Foafbot application whose evolution those articles have tracked. Also Morten Frederiksen's FoafExplorer, Daniel Krech's Web View aggregator, Jim Ley and Liz Turner's work on FOAFNaut, which alongside FOAFbot have been instrumental in showing how FOAF data can be collected and used. Meanwhile Leigh Dodd's foaf-a-matic has been the data creation tool that has been most people's gateway to FOAFdom. FOAF also owes a lot to the folks at Ecademy, TypePad and elsewhere for showing how end users can share FOAF self-descriptions on the Web without ever seeing a line of XML syntax. Jo Walsh has enthused many about hooking FOAF up to Geo and mapping data, as has Matt Biddulph by explaining the workings of his FOAF harvesting and image metadata tools. FOAF has also benefited greatly from documentation contributed in non-English languages, many thanks to all contributors of translations (foaf-a-matic and other docs). FOAF is now arguably better documented in Japanese and Spanish than in English, thanks to Masahide Kanzaki and Leandro Mariano Lopez (inkel) respectively. Thanks also to Chris Schmidt for fixing up the spec generation tool (now a Python/Redland script), as well as for contributing numerous cool hacks to the FOAF community. To Richard Cyganiak and others in IRC for (amongst much else) help debugging Apache configurations. To Ian Davis for his wonderful FOAF Logo. And last but not least, Marc Canter is in a class of his own. Thanks all, and to those who aren't listed here yet, but who made a difference...

This brief survey only scratches the surface of a growing body of work. Sincere thanks to all who have contributed tools, documentation, brain cells and enthusiasm to this project. We should also mention that FOAF would not be possible without the collaborative and opensource efforts of the RDF developer community, both in terms of idea sharing (#swig etc) and freely available tools (Jena, Redland, RDFlib, Cwm, Sesame, 3store etc).

Thanks also to TimBL, who dreamed most of this up years ago, for seeing what "hypertext flexibility" could bring...

Recent Changes

Changes in version 0.99 (2014-01-14)

2010-08-09

Changes from version 0.97 and 0.96

2009-12-15

2007-11-02

2007-05-24