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  2. Meta element - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Meta_element

    The meta element has two uses: either to emulate the use of an HTTP response header field, or to embed additional metadata within the HTML document. With HTML up to and including HTML 4.01 and XHTML, there were four valid attributes: content, http-equiv, name and scheme. Under HTML 5, charset has been added and scheme has been removed.

  3. Tag (metadata) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tag_(metadata)

    A tag cloud with terms related to Web 2.0. In information systems, a tag is a keyword or term assigned to a piece of information (such as an Internet bookmark, multimedia, database record, or computer file).

  4. HTML - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HTML

    HTML tags most commonly come in pairs like < h1 > and </ h1 >, although some represent empty elements and so are unpaired, for example < img >. The first tag in such a pair is the start tag, and the second is the end tag (they are also called opening tags and closing tags).

  5. Why Metadata Has Always, and Will Always, Matter - AOL

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  6. Tag soup - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tag_soup

    This is because in HTML and SGML, closing tags and even opening tags were optional on some elements. By requiring all elements to have explicit opening and closing tags, XML parsers can parse the document and produce a document tree without any knowledge of the document type.

  7. RDFa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RDFa

    RDFa was defined in 2008 with the "RDFa in XHTML: Syntax and Processing" Recommendation. [16] Its first application was to be a module of XHTML.. The HTML applications remained, "a collection of attributes and processing rules for extending XHTML to support RDF" expanded to HTML5, are now expressed in a specialized standard, the "HTML+RDFa" (the last is "HTML+RDFa 1.1 - Support for RDFa in ...

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    mail.aol.com

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  9. Dublin Core - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dublin_Core

    The Dublin Core vocabulary, also known as the Dublin Core Metadata Terms (DCMT), is a general purpose metadata vocabulary for describing resources of any type. It was first developed for describing web content in the early days of the World Wide Web. The Dublin Core Metadata Initiative (DCMI) is responsible for maintaining the Dublin Core ...