A detailed list of this group's publications and their status is available in the working group's specification repository.
The W3C Web Annotation Working Group is chartered to develop a set of specifications for an interoperable, sharable, distributed Web annotation architecture. The chartered specs consist of:
The Robust Link Anchoring specification will be jointly developed with the WebApps WG, where many client-side experts and browser implementers participate.
The W3C Web Annotation Working Group is part of the W3C Digital Publishing Activity, but the scope is more than just publishing; Web annotation is for all content on all devices.
The third face-to-face (f2f) meeting of the Web Annotation WG will be at W3C's TPAC (Technical Plenary and Advisory Committee) Meetings Week, in Sapporo, Japan.
For working group members interested in attending, please complete the registration form.
The second face-to-face (f2f) meeting of the Web Annotation WG will be collocated the day before the I Annotate 2015 conference, at Fort Mason, San Francisco, CA.
For working group members interested in attending, please complete the registration form.
The first face-to-face (f2f) meeting of the Web Annotation WG will be at W3C's TPAC (Technical Plenary and Advisory Committee) Meetings Week, in Santa Clara, California, USA. The entire event will take place 27-31 October 2014, and will involve meetings with most of the active W3C working groups. See the agenda for more details.
The Web Annotation Working Group has published a Working Draft of Web Annotation Data Model. Annotations are typically used to convey information about a resource or associations between resources. Simple examples include a comment or tag on a single web page or image, or a blog post about a news article.
The Web Annotation Working Group has published a Working Draft of Web Annotation Protocol. Annotations are typically used to convey information about a resource or associations between resources. Simple examples include a comment or tag on a single web page or image, or a blog post about a news article. Learn more about the Digital Publishing Activity.
The Web Annotation Working Group has published a First Public Working Draft of Web Annotation Data Model. Annotations are typically used to convey information about a resource or associations between resources. Simple examples include a comment or tag on a single web page or image, or a blog post about a news article. The Web Annotation Data Model specification describes a structured model and format to enable annotations to be shared and reused across different hardware and software platforms. Learn more about the Digital Publishing Activity.
W3C announced today the launch of the Web Annotation Working Group. Annotating, which is the act of creating associations between distinct pieces of information, is a widespread activity online in many guises but currently lacks a structured approach. Web citizens make comments about photos, videos, audio tracks, people's posts on social media, or data, but these comments are stuck in silos. The mission of the Web Annotation Working Group, part of the Digital Publishing Activity, is to define a generic data model for authoring and sharing annotations, and define the basic infrastructural elements to make it deployable in browsers and reading systems through suitable user interfaces. See the Web Annotation Working Group Charter for more information.
Annotation, the act of creating associations between distinct pieces of information, is a widespread activity online in many guises but currently lacks a structured approach. People comment about online resources using tools built into the hosting web site, external web services, or the functionality of an annotation client. When reading eBooks, people make use the tools provided by reading systems to add and share their thoughts or highlight portions of texts. Comments about photos, videos, and audio tracks, questions or clarifications about data, maps, and social media posts or mentions are all forms of annotation.
However, annotation currently lacks a structured approach. Comments are siloed inside the blog or comment system hosted and controlled by the publisher of the original document, or inside an eBook reader. They aren’t readily available for syndication or aggregation, and it’s difficult to find more comments by an insightful author if they are scattered around different places on the web. Worthwhile commentary is obscured by trolling, spam, or trivial comments. These are challenges both social and technical.
In April, W3C convened a Workshop on Annotations to discuss these challenges. Today W3C published a Workshop summary with links to slides, videos, and position papers.
Today W3C also invites review of a draft charter for a new Web Annotation Working Group based on the Workshop discussion. The group will develop an open approach for annotation, making it possible for browsers, reading systems, JavaScript libraries, and other tools, to develop an annotation ecosystem where users have access to their annotations from various environments, can share those annotations, can archive them, and use them how they wish.
Annotating is the act of creating associations between distinct pieces of information. Annotation is a ubiquitous activity online in many guises: comments on articles, footnotes, sticky notes, “hot spots” on images, timestamped notes on video or audio tracks, highlighted text passages in ebook readers, evocative pictures attached to song lyrics, quotes and links on social media, and even tagged bookmarks, are all forms of annotation. One of the most common and engaging Web activities for the average person is discussion of a document or piece of media.
Many projects and companies are now turning to annotations to solve a variety of issues with communication on the Web, and is of particular interest to the education, research, and digital publishing industries. To address these needs, W3C’s Web Annotations workshop will focus on identifying standardization priorities for chartering a potential Web Annotation Working Group, on such topics as:
Robust anchoring to dynamic third-party documents
Styling selections and annotations
Data models
Federation and syndication
Web storage and management of annotations
Client side APIs and methods for the implementation of annotation systems