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    Terence Eden’s Blog (blog@shkspr.mobi)'s status on Tuesday, 22-Oct-2024 13:17:26 JSTTerence Eden’s BlogTerence Eden’s Blog

    Is Open Graph Protocol dead?
    https://shkspr.mobi/blog/2022/11/is-open-graph-protocol-dead/

    Facebook Meta - like many other tech titans - has institutional Shiny Object Syndrome. It goes something like this:

    1. Launch a product to great fanfare
    2. Spend a few years hyping it as ✨the future✨
    3. Stop answering emails and pull requests
    4. If you're lucky, announce that the product is abandoned but, more likely, just forget about it.

    Open Graph Protocol (OGP) is one of those products. The value-proposition is simple.

    • It's hard for computers to pick out the main headline, image, and other data from a complex web page.
    • Therefore, let's encourage websites to include metadata which tells our services what they should look at!

    OGP works pretty well! When you share a link on Facebook, or Twitter, or Telegram - those services load the website in the background, look for OGP metadata, and display a friendly snippet.

    Facebook Meta were the driving force behind OGP - and have now left it to fester.

    • The website - https://ogp.me/ - still works.
    • But the Facebook OGP Discussion Group is now full of spam.
    • The Developer Mailing List is broken.
    • The Google Documentation links to a dead Google+ page.
    • And the GitHub Page has been archived.
    Is OGP finished?

    And, that might be fine. Facebook Meta are a small company with limited resources. They can't afford to fund standards work indefinitely. And, anyway, OGP is complete, right? It has all the tags that anyone could ever possibly want. Why does it need any improving?

    Well, that's not the case. We know, for example, that Twitter have created their own proprietary OGP-like meta tags. Similarly, Pinterest have their own as well. And even Google are going their own way with Rich Snippets.

    This is annoying for developers. Now we have to write multiple different bits of metadata if we want our links to be supported on all platforms.

    Standards work is never "finished". Developers want to add new features. Users want to interact with new forms of content.

    Tomorrow someone is going to invent a way to share smells over the Internet. How does that get represented in an Open Graph Protocol compliant manner?

    <meta property="twitter:olfactory" content="C₃H₆S"> or<meta property="facebook:nose" content="InChIKey/MWOOGOJBHIARFG-UHFFFAOYSA-N"> or<meta property="og:smell" content="pumpkin spice"> or...

    We know from bitter experience that having several mutually incompatible ways to implement something is a nightmare for developers and provides a poor user-experience.

    So we create standards bodies. They're not perfect, but a group of interested folks can do the hard work to try and satisfy oppositional stakeholders.

    This is my plea to Facebook Meta. If you're no longer interested in improving OGP, OK. You do you. But hand it over to people who want to keep this going. Maybe it's the W3C, or IndieWeb, or Schema.org or someone. Hell, I'm not busy, I'll take it on.

    Remember, if you love something, let it go.

    https://shkspr.mobi/blog/2022/11/is-open-graph-protocol-dead/

    #facebook #HTML #meta #metadata #ogp #standards #twitter

    In conversationabout 7 months ago from shkspr.mobipermalink

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    1. Domain not in remote thumbnail source whitelist: ogp.me
      Open Graph protocol
      The Open Graph protocol enables any web page to become a rich object in a social graph.
    2. No result found on File_thumbnail lookup.
      Schema.org - Schema.org
      Schema.org is a set of extensible schemas that enables webmasters to embed structured data on their web pages for use by search engines and other applications.
    3. Domain not in remote thumbnail source whitelist: simple.it
      Home
      from admin
      Simple.it Solutions for your computer and smartphone From the blog Highlits Configurazione di Python: Guida Python per principianti – parte 2 Byadmin Novembre 22, 2023 Computer,Linux,Mac,Programmazione,Python,Windows Impara la configurazione di Python sul tuo computer ed esplora i migliori IDE per un’esperienza di codifica ottimale… Read More Python Setup: Python Beginner’s Course part 2 Byadmin Novembre […]

    4. https://shkspr.mobi/blog/wp-content/uploads/2018/03/Facebook.jpeg


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