Findings of the W3C Technical Architecture Group (original) (raw)
The primary activity of the TAG is to develop Architectural Recommendations. The TAG findings listed below document fundamental principles that should be adhered to by all Web components. The TAG expects to include these findings in the TAG's Architectural Recommendations, to be published according to the requirements of the W3C Recommendation Track process.
This page documents TAG findings, which may either be approved or draft findings.
The TAG gathers input from the community as it works on draft findings. Once the TAG approves finding, it announces it to www-tag as an approved finding. The TAG may review the finding if there is substantial opposition.
Approved findings
- W3C TAG Observations on Private Browsing Modes (5 July 2019)
- W3C TAG Ethical Web Principles (30 May 2019)
- Guidelines for creating web platform compatible components (29 October 2018)
- Distributed and syndicated content (27 June 2017)
- The evergreen Web (9 February 2017)
- Polyfills and the evolution of the Web (7 February 2017)
- Unsanctioned Web Tracking (17 July 2015)
- End-to-End Encryption and the Web (16 July 2015)
- Securing the Web (22 January 2015)
- Good Practices for Capability URLs (October 2014)
- Writing Promise-Using Specifications (October 2014)
- Authoritative Metadata (22 April 2013)
- Identifying Application State (1 December 2011)
- The Self-Describing Web (7 February 2009)
- Associating Resources with Namespaces (25 June 2008)
- The use of Metadata in URIs (2 January 2007)
- On Linking Alternative Formats To Enable Discovery And Publishing (1st November 2006)
- The Rule of Least Power (23 February 2006)
- The Disposition of Names in an XML Namespace (9 January 2006)
- How should the problem of identifying ID semantics in XML languages be addressed in the absence of a DTD? (30 November 2004)
- Internet Media Type registration, consistency of use (30 April 2004)
- URIs, Addressability, and the use of HTTP GET and POST (21 March 2004)
- Using QNames as Identifiers (17 March 2004)
- "Deep Linking" in the World Wide Web (11 Sep 2003)
- Consistency of Formatting Property Names, Values, and Semantics (25 Jul 2002)
- Mapping between URIs and Internet media types (27 May 2002)
Draft findings
- Data Minimization in API Design
- Passwords in the Clear
- Abstract Component References
- XML Chunk Equality
- URI Schemes and Web Protocols
- URNs, Namespaces and Registries
- Extending and Versioning:
- State in Web application design
- Dereferencing HTTP URIs (Abandoned in favour of "Cool URIs for the Semantic Web")
- Usage Patterns For Client-Side URL parameters
Archival findings
About TAG findings
At its 4 Nov 2002 teleconference, the TAG agreed to adopt the following policy for managing findings versions.
A finding draft should be managed like a W3C technical report:
- After announcement of a draft, we don't modify it.
- Each draft has a latest/this version URI and links to the previous version.
- The status section of a finding draft indicates whether the document is a draft/for review in light of TAG consensus/ approved by the TAG.
Having approved a finding:
- For minor changes thereafter, we continue to publish updates using the same "latest version URI" (i.e., it remains part of the same document series). It is possible for the latest version of the series to be "not yet approved". That should be a temporary state, however. Findings in an intermediate state should refer to the previous approved version.
- For major changes, we can start a new series (with a different "latest version URI"). If we start a new series, the new series should explain its relation to the old one (e.g., whether the new series supersedes the old series).