Abstract This document defines a lightweight, robust, and secure protocol for sending unsolicited notifications â especially comments and responses on syndicated feed content â to specified endpoints; along with rules to enable resulting content to itself be syndicated robustly and securely. This protocol defines the 'rules of the road' for these mechanisms, tying together and relying on lower lev
In writing the spec for Salmon we soon discovered that what we really wanted was S/MIME signatures for the Web.  In other words, given a message, let you sign it with a private key, and let receivers verify the signature using the corresponding public key.  Signing and verifying are pretty well understood, but in practice canonicalizing data and signing is hard to get right.  Making sure that the
A few days ago, at the Real Time Web Summit, we had a session about Salmon, a protocol for re-aggregated distributed conversations around web content.  I was hoping for some feedback and to generate some interest, and I was overwhelmed by the positive reactions, especially after Louis Gray's post "Proposed Salmon Protocol aims to unify Conversations on the Web". Adina Levin's "Salmon - Re-assembli
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