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Recent Posts
 Tuesday, March 09, 2004
Disruptive Technology - The Deep Web

The term Deep Web refers to the Web-accessible - but not currently Web-crawled - data out there. For the most part, this is databased information.

There's a good - if light - article on Salon (free daily pass required) today about this issue, In search of the deep Web.

To say that this technology is disruptive is to put it mildly. A disruptive technology can be described (by me) as one that forces a change/changes in a highly disproportional way to its appearance, and its effect is just about impossible to gauge before the shift happens.

A classic disruptive technology is file-sharing of music. We all know the Napster/GNUtella/RIAA stories.

A even simpler example is the hyperlink: OK, this take you to another page. Cool. So what?

So what?

This link enables today's search engines to do what they do - they keep following links and, in some cases (such as Google), use the number of linkings to a page to assign page ranks. A link - a public URL - allows anyone (and that's key) to link directly to that page.

Your friends, your enemies, your competitors, search engines, the government...they all can link to your page.

Didn't think that <A HREF></A> had so much power, did you? Well, maybe today you do, but did you back in the Netscape 1.1 days?

As is typical of a disruptive technology, the deep Web issue raises more questions than it answers/can answer. For example:

For the answers to these and other questions, check back in about five years...

- Posted by Lee at 12:17 PM Permalink #
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