Global Multimedia Protocols Group

The Global Multimedia Protocols Group (GMPG) was founded in March 2003 by Tantek Çelik, Eric A. Meyer, and Matt Mullenweg. The group has developed methods to represent human relationships using XHTML called XHTML Friends Network (XFN) and XHTML Meta Data Profiles (XMDP), for use in weblogs.

It is an informal organization who engages in experiments in metamemetics.

It was first mentioned in 1992 by author Neal Stephenson in his novel Snow Crash.[1]

GMPG was founded by Tantek Çelik, Eric Meyer, and Matthew Mullenweg who developed the initial principles for XFN, the XHTML Friends Network as an attempt for the creation of a simple way to express human relationships on the Web within HTML (machine-readable).

As of 2015, an analysis of the network of pages collected by Common Crawl found that the web host gmpg.org had the highest PageRank and third highest in-degree of all the hosts in the network.[2]

XFN - XHTML Friends Network

XFN provides a list of non-standard attribute values for the HTML attribute "rel", which is used within the "A" element for hyperlinks.

gollark: It's just self-interest.
gollark: A dead player can't buy your ingame coins, after alll.
gollark: CEOs *probably* won't let *that many* people die to make their game more popular.
gollark: Well, you could be injured and not be able to heal it as easily as modern medicine could.
gollark: Modern life is... pretty safe, I guess, we have things like "medicine" and "policing" and "civilization". Games patterned off some older world and where conflict is a key mechanic are *not*.

See also

References

  1. Neal Stephenson, "Snow Crash", chapter 3, Bantam Books (USA), June 1992 ISBN 0-553-08853-X
  2. Meusel, Robert; Vigna, Sebastiano; Lehmberg, Oliver; Bizer, Christian (2015). "The Graph Structure in the Web --- Analyzed on Different Aggregation Levels" (PDF). Journal of Web Science. 1: 33–47. doi:10.1561/106.00000003. hdl:2434/372411. Retrieved April 24, 2017.


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