| ▲ | robotstxtwasbad 2 hours ago | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
RFC 8820 section 2.3, also known as BCP 190, is not a theoretical argument. That's why we call it a "best current practice". You, nor any other standard like you, are not entitled to declare what a root URI means in my Web namespace, and you are up against an IETF MUST NOT by fighting for this. This is a _very_ philosophical argument, not a practical one, and it's why I'm firmly against your standard out of the gate (and would work to reject it as, say, an RFC). The same paragraph takes you to RFC 8615, which is the .well-known you are being told to use. That is not your "secondary location" for v1.1. That is the only path you are permitted to consider as someone with intent to standardize a portion of the HTTP URI namespace. The decades-old precedent you are citing here, and leaning on as foundational, was rejected at the philosophical level by the IETF, and it is completely rejected as appropriate precedent for the writing of standards going forward. You are being told how the Web works. It's not about you, the magical universe of agentic, or your community. You are attempting to standardize a part of the technical commons. If you want the public to obey your standard, this isn't the way to engage while selling it -- despite it being CC0, you're phasing in and out of "my" standard and "our" standard a little oddly, and you're a little standoffish to (correct) feedback, feedback that in this case is existential to your project making it to a dozen stars and a discussion. Wix and Shopify have zero bearing on the standardization of the Web. Companies in general shouldn't, in fact (har har), which is useful background for an aspiring standards writer. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | tsazan 2 hours ago | parent [-] | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
I appreciate the detailed feedback (and the edits). You are technically correct regarding IETF norms. But you say: "Wix and Shopify have zero bearing on the standardization of the Web." I fundamentally disagree. The Web is not just a namespace for engineers; it is an economy for millions of small businesses. If a standard is technically "pure" but unusable by 80% of merchants on hosted platforms, it fails the Web. However, to respect the namespace: We will mandate checking /.well-known/commerce.txt first. But we will keep the root location as a fallback. We prioritize accessibility for the "aspiring" shop owner over strict purity for the standards writer. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||