Automated Content Access Protocol (ACAP)

Posted by Paul Watson on

OK, well I’ve spent some time reviewing this new specification.

It’s a mixture of a couple of useful new qualifiers to the old robots.txt standard and a lot of anally-retentive control-freakery written by people who still don’t get “the internet”.

The good points:

The bloody terrible points (control-freakery and lack of understanding):

Thankfully there is no legal requirement that the search engines take any notice whatsoever of this new “technical framework”.

I kinda hope that the tech community takes the good points out of this spec (pattern-matching, time constraints etc) and just upgrades the good old robots.txt standard, ignoring the worts excesses of control-freakery that the publishing industry have slipped in.

a bit of blog reaction to ACAP:

In the interests of fairness I tried to find a positive article about ACAP, but there’s absolutely nothing.

Luckily this ACAP protocol does not have the support of the search engines and so is likely to fail and die.

The ACAP site does brag that “Major search engines are engaged in the project. Exalead, the world’s fourth largest search engine has been a full participant in the project.”

Exalead? Who the hell are they? If you can’t claim the involvement of Google and/or Yahoo if any search-engine specific project then you’re dead on your feet.

And in the case of ACAP, I’m glad.

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