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      Fractal Web - Commentary on Web Architecture
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    <address>
      Tim Berners-Lee<br />
      Date: 1998, last change: $Date: 2011/09/27 22:31:21 $<br />
      Status: personal view only. Editing status: Mature. Appended
      to at intervals when new things turn up.
    </address>
    <p>
      <a href="./">Up to Design Issues</a>
    </p>
    <h3>
      Commentary on Architecture
    </h3>
    <hr />
    <h1>
      The Scale-free nature of the Web
    </h1>
    <p>
      This article was originally entitled "The Fractal nature of
      the web". Since then, i have been assured that while many
      people seem to use <em>fractal</em> to refer to a Zipf (1/f)
      distribution, it should really only be used in spaces of
      finite dimension, like the two-dimensional planes of
      MandelBrot sets. The correct term for the Web, then, is
      <em>scale-free</em>.
    </p>
    <p>
      This isn't an observation so much as a requirement.
    </p>
    <p>
      I have <a href="#Berners-Lee">discussed elsewhere</a> how we
      must avoid the two opposite social deaths of a global
      monoculture and a set of isolated cults, and how the fractal
      patterns found in nature seem to present themselves as a good
      compromise. It seems that the compromise between stability
      and diversity is served by there the same amount of structure
      at all scales. I have no mathematical theory to demonstrate
      that this is an optimization of some metric for the
      resilience of society and its effectiveness as an organism,
      nor have I even that metric. (Mail me if you do!)
    </p>
    <p>
      However, it seems from experience that groups are stable when
      they have a set of peers, when they have a substructure.
      Neither the set of peers nor the substructure must involve
      huge numbers, as groups cannot "scale", that is, work
      effectively with a very large number of liaisons with peers,
      or when composed as a set of a very large number of parts. If
      this is the case then by induction there must be a continuum
      of group sizes from the vary largest to the very smallest.
    </p>
    <p>
      This seems to be a general rule which can guide our design,
      and against which we can measure actual patterns of use.
    </p>
    <p>
      It is in fact another aspect of the tension between many
      languages and one global language. Locally defined languages
      are easy to create, needing local consensus about meaning:
      only a limited number of people have to share a mental
      pattern of relationships which define the meaning. However,
      global languages are so much more effective at communication,
      reaching the parts that local languages cannot. This tension
      is exemplified in the standards process, when ideas have to
      be exposed to successively larger and larger groups, with
      friction and hard work at each stage.
    </p>
    <p>
      Other interesting things to model passing though a fractal
      system include DNA traits in intermarrying populations
      Someone suggested (who?) that the invention of the bicycle
      made a great difference to average health in the Welsh
      valleys because it allowed greater intermarrying and so
      increased the effective gene pool size Clearly, global travel
      could end up reducing the diversity. viruses propagating
      through schools and traveling business people; and problems
      propagating to someone who has a solution are more good
      exercises (State your assumptions!).
    </p>
    <h3>
      Zipf happens
    </h3>
    <p>
      Whether we like it or not, early measurements of web traffic
      by the DEC WRL firewall showed DEC employees browsing sites
      with a Zipf (1/n) distribution of popularity. (Anyone got any
      other measurements? [Neilsen 1997]). Recent analyses suggest
      the Web becoming smaller for its size seem to use.
    </p>
    <p>
      How can we use knowledge of the Web's fractal nature? By
      planning network bandwidth between long-range and short-range
      communication, planning for cache usage, etc. The physical
      network can be expected to have a variety of scale
      geographically, like the road system. However, the structure
      of the Web is interestingly different because of the lack of
      two-dimensional constraint. The challenge is to use this
      flexibility in building an effective society on top of the
      Web.
    </p>
    <h3>
      Looking for a metric
    </h3>
    <p>
      What do we mean by "effective"? We mean we would like to
      combine scientist's creative ability and knowledge to find a
      cure for AIDS. We would like to preserve world peace by
      allowing xenophobia to disperse in a web of understanding,
      while at the same time preserving the diversity of culture
      which gives the human race its richness. These are of course
      the same classic problems of the management of a large
      organization, of combining individual creativity with
      corporate vision.
    </p>
    <p>
      If the web of society has an imbalance, we pay for it. We pay
      for insufficient global understanding with war. We pay for
      insufficient family communication with broken families and
      unsupported individuals. At any level of scale, missing
      social structure at that scale will prevent problems at that
      scale being addressed, and also prevent resources at that
      scale being used. It would therefore be great to have a way
      of measuring for a given web the degree to which it has a
      balanced fractal pattern, and if not where its weaknesses
      are.
    </p>
    <p>
      Those looking for the "small world" effect chose metrics such
      as the maximum or mean value of the shortest path between any
      two points. This gives us a metric for effectiveness at the
      global scale, but not of the chewiness.
    </p>
    <p>
      Clustering algorithms can produce globs of various sizes, and
      a measure of the chewiness of a web may be that the cluster
      sizes have a Zipf distribution. For example, using Jon
      Kleinberg's algorithm (which for a link matrix A associates
      concepts with the eigenvectors of A*A), the strength of the
      cluster is the value of the eigenvalue, and (while this does
      not directly indicate size) an interesting test would be on
      the relative absolute values (squares?) of successive
      eigenvalues.
    </p>
    <p>
      Looking it at from the point of view of an individual (a
      graph node), an interesting question is the proportion of the
      traffic which is to local or more distant nodes. In
      Marchiori's model [<a href="#marchiori">Marchiori</a>]
      traffic flows between two nodes in inverse proportion to the
      resistance of the shortest path. The total "efficiency" is
      deemed to be the total flow between all pairs of nodes. Can
      we measure a "chewiness" which measures the approximation of
      the system to a fractal distribution of long and short range
      communication? If the Marchiori model were modified to use
      parallel conductance (more like a real signal flow system)
      then would this be simpler?
    </p>
    <p>
      Suppose for example we look at the amount of connection we
      have with nodes whose distance, or groups whose size, is of
      each order of magnitude and look for smoothness up to the
      global level.
    </p>
    <h3>
      Stop Press
    </h3>
    <p>
      <em>2000/03</em>
    </p>
    <p>
      Well, here I was thinking that while it is intuitively clear
      that society has to be fractal, I didn't know a mathematical
      justification for it, when <a href=
      "http://www.cs.cornell.edu/home/kleinber/kleinber.html">Jon
      Kleinberg</a> comes up with what for me is his second cool
      web result.
    </p>
    <p>
      This is a paper takes the case of a two-dimensional grid. It
      imagines each cell having a certain distribution of links of
      various lengths. It demonstrates that in order to achieve the
      connectivity a la <em>6 degrees of separation</em> which
      scales with the log of the size of the system, then the
      distribution of link density as a function of distance must
      be precisely an inverse-square law. That is, each cell must
      have the same number of links (on average) to cells 1-10
      squares away as to cells 10-100 away, etc. Anything more
      local or more global leads to less of a small-world
      phenomenon: this is the only scalable solution.
    </p>
    <p>
      True, this applies to a geographical grid, and a square
      rather uniform one at that. However, He does generalize it to
      more dimensions. Furthermore, you can see logically how the
      system works. To get a postcard to an arbitrary person in
      Massachusetts through a network of friends, you must have
      enough local friends to be able to find someone who will know
      someone in Massachusetts. The person they find in
      Massachusetts must be able to pass it to people successively
      closer and closer to the target. this only works if there is
      connectivity on each scale. True, no one has derived the
      metric of the number of hops a message takes as being an
      essential metric for systems, but on the other hand there is
      a clear analogy with the number of hops between a problem and
      a solution in a large organization .
    </p>
    <p>
      Other work:
    </p>
    <ul>
      <li>
        <a href="http://dmag.upf.es/livingsw">Living semantic
        web</a>
      </li>
    </ul>
    <h3>
      Data from Swoogle April 2005
    </h3><img style="width: 500px; height: 400px; float: right;"
    alt="Yes, zipf dist from Swoogle" src=
    "diagrams/swoogle/figure6-2005-04.png" /><br />
    Nice to see some Zipf-shaped curves. &nbsp;Swoogle <a href=
    "http://swoogle.umbc.edu/modules.php?name=Swoogle_Statistics&amp;file=figure&amp;figurename=figure6">
    notes</a>:
    <ul>
      <li>All these series follows Zipf's distribution, except the
      tail
      </li>
      <li>The sharp decrease the tail in "class populated" shows
      that the most populated classes highly correlated such that
      their are populated by almost the same amount of SWDs.
      Similar situation can be observed in other series.
      </li>
      <li>The closeness of the sharp decrease of "class populated"
      and "property populated" is caused by the co-existence of
      certain classes and certain properties.
      </li>
    </ul>
    <h2 id="personal">
      Postscript - A personal exercise
    </h2>
    <p>
      There will I am sure be a lot of ways in which the fractal
      requirement is used in web design. You can also use it in
      that task of figuring out how you fit in to society at large
      (and at small). Do your personal interactions spread across
      the scales? Here is a self-help chart to help think about
      this. You fill in the groups in your life.
    </p>
    <table border="1">
      <tbody>
        <tr>
          <th>
            Scale
          </th>
          <td>
            1
          </td>
          <td>
            10
          </td>
          <td>
            1000
          </td>
          <td>
            10k
          </td>
          <td>
            100k
          </td>
          <td>
            1M
          </td>
          <td>
            10M
          </td>
          <td>
            100M
          </td>
          <td>
            1G
          </td>
        </tr>
        <tr>
          <th>
            Group
          </th>
          <td>
            You
          </td>
          <td>
            family,
            <p>
              group
            </p>
          </td>
          <td>
            ...
          </td>
          <td>
            ...
          </td>
          <td>
            town?
          </td>
          <td>
            city?
          </td>
          <td>
            country?
          </td>
          <td>
            USA
          </td>
          <td>
            World population
          </td>
        </tr>
        <tr>
          <th>
            Time spent
          </th>
          <td>
            ?
          </td>
          <td>
            ?
          </td>
          <td>
            ?
          </td>
          <td>
            ?
          </td>
          <td>
            ?
          </td>
          <td>
            ?
          </td>
          <td>
            ?
          </td>
          <td>
            ?
          </td>
          <td>
            ?
          </td>
        </tr>
        <tr>
          <th>
            Money spent
          </th>
          <td>
            ?
          </td>
          <td>
            ?
          </td>
          <td>
            ?
          </td>
          <td>
            ?
          </td>
          <td>
            ?
          </td>
          <td>
            ?
          </td>
          <td>
            ?
          </td>
          <td>
            ?
          </td>
          <td>
            ?
          </td>
        </tr>
        <tr>
          <th>
            etc
          </th>
          <td>
            ?
          </td>
          <td>
            ?
          </td>
          <td>
            ?
          </td>
          <td>
            ?
          </td>
          <td>
            ?
          </td>
          <td>
            ?
          </td>
          <td>
            ?
          </td>
          <td>
            ?
          </td>
          <td>
            ?
          </td>
        </tr>
      </tbody>
    </table>
    <p>
      Another way to do this is find 11 jars, and label one with
      each scale in powers of 10. (You don't have to paint them but
      it helps).
    </p>
    <p>
      <img src="diagrams/jars.png" alt="11 jars from 1 to 1G" />
    </p>
    <p>
      Put marbles in each can for each time period you spend on
      matters at a given scale, such as an international meeting,
      or a school sportsfield, or with your family, or alone in a
      treehouse. How well balanced do the jars become?
    </p>
    <p>
      As a social person, do you spend enough time with groups of
      each size? If not, are there people one click from you who
      do, and through whom you are indirectly present in those
      groups? One of the concerns is that the last column - the
      global column - tends in my observation to get the smallest
      amount money at least, as in the US federal and state and
      town taxes are spread around the other areas but the level of
      international aid is very much lower. The cool thing is that
      I think people are born with DNA which gives them a healthy
      interest at all these levels. People who stick at one scale
      all their lives feel very uncomfortable. Maybe our
      preferences have evolved to form naturally a fractal society.
    </p>
    <h3>
      <a name="tco" id="tco">Total Cost of Ontologies (2005)</a>
    </h3>(I can't remember where I originally brought this up, I
    think at the Web Science workshop in London 2005/9. This is
    from ISWC 2005 slides.)
    <p>
      One of the interesting things about assuming a fractal
      distribution is you can think about the number of ontologies
      an the time it takes to make them, and the total cost of
      using ontologies. So let us for example naivel assume
      that<br />
      ontologies are evenly spread across orders of magnitude;
      committe &nbsp;size goes&nbsp; as log(community),&nbsp;time
      as comitee^2, cost is shared across community.<br />
    </p>
    <table style="text-align: left; width: 100%;" border="1"
    cellpadding="2" cellspacing="2">
      <tbody>
        <tr>
          <td>
            Scale
          </td>
          <td>
            Eg
          </td>
          <td>
            Committe size
          </td>
          <td>
            Cost per ontology (weeks)
          </td>
          <td>
            Cost for me
          </td>
        </tr>
        <tr>
          <td>
            0
          </td>
          <td>
            Me
          </td>
          <td>
            1
          </td>
          <td>
            1
          </td>
          <td>
            1.000000
          </td>
        </tr>
        <tr>
          <td>
            10
          </td>
          <td>
            My team
          </td>
          <td>
            4
          </td>
          <td>
            16
          </td>
          <td>
            1.600000
          </td>
        </tr>
        <tr>
          <td>
            100
          </td>
          <td>
            Group
          </td>
          <td>
            7
          </td>
          <td>
            49
          </td>
          <td>
            0.490000
          </td>
        </tr>
        <tr>
          <td>
            1000
          </td>
          <td></td>
          <td>
            10
          </td>
          <td>
            100
          </td>
          <td>
            0.100000
          </td>
        </tr>
        <tr>
          <td>
            10k
          </td>
          <td>
            Enterprise
          </td>
          <td>
            13
          </td>
          <td>
            169
          </td>
          <td>
            0.016900
          </td>
        </tr>
        <tr>
          <td>
            100k
          </td>
          <td>
            Business area
          </td>
          <td>
            16
          </td>
          <td>
            256
          </td>
          <td>
            0.002560
          </td>
        </tr>
        <tr>
          <td>
            1M
          </td>
          <td></td>
          <td>
            19
          </td>
          <td>
            361
          </td>
          <td>
            0.000361
          </td>
        </tr>
        <tr>
          <td>
            10M
          </td>
          <td></td>
          <td>
            22
          </td>
          <td>
            484
          </td>
          <td>
            0.000048
          </td>
        </tr>
        <tr>
          <td>
            100M
          </td>
          <td>
            National, State
          </td>
          <td>
            25
          </td>
          <td>
            625
          </td>
          <td>
            0.000006
          </td>
        </tr>
        <tr>
          <td>
            1G
          </td>
          <td>
            EU, US
          </td>
          <td>
            28
          </td>
          <td>
            784
          </td>
          <td>
            0.000001
          </td>
        </tr>
        <tr>
          <td>
            10G
          </td>
          <td>
            Planet
          </td>
          <td>
            31
          </td>
          <td>
            961
          </td>
          <td>
            0.000000
          </td>
        </tr>
      </tbody>
    </table><br />
    Total cost of 10 ontologies: 3.2 weeks. Serious project: 30
    ontologies, TCO = 10 weeks.<br />
    Lesson: <span style="font-weight: bold;">Do your bit. Others
    will do theirs.</span><br />
    Thank those who do working groups.
    <h3>
      <a name="exp" id="exp">Q: How can the semantic web
      work...</a>
    </h3>
    <p>
      <em>... when we are all in one big domain of discourse but
      people are all making their own local ontologies?</em>
      (2007/3/3)
    </p>
    <p>
      Rather than 'domain of discourse' , or set of things
      considered, I think of 'community', set of agents
      communicating using certain terms. When one thinks in terms
      of domain of discourse, one tends to conclude that everyone
      who talk at all about a car (say) has cars in their domain of
      discourse and so everyone must share the model which includes
      the single class Car.
    </p>
    <p>
      It isn't like that though. An agent plays a role in many
      different overlapping communities. When I tag a photo as
      being of my car, or I agree to use my car in a car pool, or
      when I register the car with the Registry of Motor Vehicles,
      I probably use different ontologies. There is some finite
      effort it would take to integrate the ontologies, to
      establish some OWL (or rules, etc) to link them.
    </p>
    <ul>
      <li>Everyone is encouraged to reuse other people's classes
      and properties to the greatest extent they can.
      </li>
      <li>Some ontologies will already exist and by publicly shred
      by many, such as ical:dtstart, geo:longitude, etc. This is
      the single global community.
      </li>
      <li>Some ontologies will be established by smaller
      communities of many sizes.
      </li>
    </ul>
    <p>
      Why do I think the structure should be will be fractal?
      Clearly there will be many more small communities, local
      ontologies, than global ones. Why a 1/f distribution? Well,
      it seems to occur in many systems including the web, and may
      be optimal for some problems. That we should design for a
      fractal distribution of ontologies is a hunch. But it does
      solve the issue you raise. Some aspects of the web have been
      shown to be fractal already.
    </p>Here are some properties of the interconnections:
    <ul>
      <li>- The connections between the ontologies may be made
      after their creation, not necessarily involving the original
      ontology designers.
      </li>
      <li>- There is a cost of connecting ontologies, figuring out
      how they connect, which people will pay when and only when
      they need the benefit of extra interoperability.
      </li>
      <li>- Sometimes when connecting ontologies, it is so awkward
      there is pressure to change the terms that one community uses
      to fit in better with the other community. Again, a finite
      cost to make the change, against a benefit or more interop.
      </li>
    </ul>
    <p>
      Yes, if web-based means an overlapping set of many ontologies
      in a fractal distribution. In his fractal tangle, there wil
      be several recurring patterns at different scales. One
      pattern is a local integration within (say) an enterprise,
      which starts point-point (problems scale as n^2) and then
      shifts with EIA to a hub-and-spoke as you say, where the
      effort scales as N. Then the hub is converted to use RDF, and
      that means the hub then plugs into a external bus, as it
      connects to shared ontologies.
    </p>
    <p>
      So the idea is that in any one message, some of the terms
      will be from a global ontology, some from subdomains. The
      amount of data which can be reused by another agent will
      depend on how many communities they have in common, how many
      ontologies they share.
    </p>
    <p>
      In other words, one global ontology is not a solution to the
      problem, and a local subdomain is not a solution either. But
      if each agent has uses a mix of a few ontologies of different
      scale, that is forms a global solution to the problem.
    </p>
    <h2>
      Conjecture
    </h2>
    <p>
      The conjecture is that there is some model which reasonably
      well described these systems, and that given that model one
      can show that the scale-free distribution of communities is
      optimal.
    </p>
    <p>
      There are many other questions. Of course existing systems on
      the earth may be very much influenced by the geographical
      reality of a two-dimensional surface. Historical groups have
      been nested geographically. So though there may be aspects in
      which community size is scale-free, that maybe a completely
      different optimisation problem from the one we have when on
      the Internet anyone can connect to anyone. If you could
      devise an algorithm for connecting people into groups, and so
      that they each participated in communities of different sizes
      in a scale-free way, then how much more effective (at solving
      problems, etc) can you make a web-based society which ignores
      geographical borders? To what extent does humanity as
      currently connected by the web in fact deviate from
      geographical nesting anyway?
    </p>
    <hr />
    <h2>
      References
    </h2>
    <p>
      Jacob Nielsen "<a href=
      "http://www.useit.com/alertbox/zipf.html">Zipf Curves and
      Website Popularity</a>", (Sidebar to column <a href=
      "http://www.useit.com/alertbox/9704b.html">Increasing returns
      for websites</a>)
    </p>
    <p>
      <a name="R&Eacute;KA" id="R&Eacute;KA">R&Eacute;KA ALBERT</a>
      <em>et al:</em> <a href=
      "http://www.nature.com/server-java/Propub/nature/401130A0.frameset">
      Diameter of the World-Wide Web,</a> Nature
      <strong>401</strong>, 130 (1999) <em>Brief
      communications</em>
    </p>
    <p>
      <a name="Berners-Le" id="Berners-Le">Berners-Lee, T</a>,
      "<a href="/People/Berners-Lee/Weaving">Weaving the Web</a>",
      HarperSanFrancisco 1999, pp199-204
    </p>
    <p>
      <a href="http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/572326.572328">Dill, S,
      et al., "Self-similarity in the web"</a> ACM Transactions on
      Internet Technology (TOIT) Volume 2 ,B Issue 3 B (August
      2002). Thanks Jim Hendler for the pointer. Findings seem to
      justify the ideas above.
    </p>
    <p>
      DECWRL results, presented at an early WWW conference.
    </p>
    <p>
      <a name="marchiori" id="marchiori">Marchiori M &amp; Latora
      V, "</a><a href=
      "http://axpfct.ct.infn.it/%7Elatora/harmony_physicaA2000.pdf">Harmony
      in the small world</a>". Private communication 1999. Later
      published in <em>Physica A</em>, vol. 285 (pages 539--546),
      2000.
    </p>
    <p>
      <a name="Kleinberg" href=
      "http://www.cs.cornell.edu/home/kleinber/kleinber.html" id=
      "Kleinberg">Jon Kleinberg</a>, <a href=
      "http://www.cs.cornell.edu/home/kleinber/swn.ps">The
      small-world phenomenon: An algorithmic perspective.</a>
      Cornell Computer Science Technical Report 99-1776, October
      1999. (<a href=
      "http://www.cs.cornell.edu/home/kleinber/swn.ps">ps</a>,
      &nbsp;In)
    </p>
    <p>
      Daniel A. Menasc&eacute; et al., <em><a href=
      "http://www2002.org/CDROM/alternate/724/">Fractal
      Characterization of Web Workloads</a></em>,
    </p>
    <h2>
      Follow up
    </h2>
    <p>
      Things which turned up later, not necessarily referencing this.
    </p>
    <p>
    T. Berners-Lee and L.Kagal, <a href="http://dig.csail.mit.edu/2007/Papers/AIMagazine/fractal-paper.pdf">
    The Fractal Nature of the Semantic Web</a>
    AI Magazine, 2007.
    </p>
    <p>
    Tim Berners-Lee, "Its just like a bag of chips", in  Gov 2.0 Expo 2010.<br/>
      <object width="640" height="385"><param name="movie"
        value="http://www.youtube.com/v/ga1aSJXCFe0?fs=1&amp;hl=en_US"></param><param
        name="allowFullScreen" value="true"></param><param name="allowscriptaccess"
        value="always"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/ga1aSJXCFe0?fs=1&amp;hl=en_US"
        type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowscriptaccess="always"
        allowfullscreen="true" width="640" height="385"></embed></object>
    </p>
    <p>
    Joab Jackson, <a href="http://www.itworld.com/software/109194/berners-lee-deconstructs-a-bag-chips">
    <em>Berners-Lee deconstructs a bag of chips</em></a> IT World, May 27, 2010
    </p>
    <p>
      Paul Barford and Sally Floyd, <a href=
      "http://www.cs.bu.edu/pub/barford/ss_lrd.html"><em>Self-similarity
      and long range dependence in networks</em></a>" web site.
    </p>
    <p>
      Clay Shirky,<a href=
      "http://www.shirky.com/writings/powerlaw_weblog.html"><em>Power
      Laws, Weblogs, and Inequality</em></a>
    </p>
    <p>
      Kottke, <a href=
      "http://www.kottke.org/03/02/weblogs-and-power-laws"><em>Weblogs
      and power laws</em></a>, February 09, 2003 at 06:39 pm.
      Distribution of links to the top blogs follows a power law.
    </p>
    <p>
      Richard McManus, <a href=
      "http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/fractal_web_app.php"><em>
      Fractal Web applied to Blogging</em></a>, January 15, 2004.
      <cite>"As you have seen, the Tim Berners-Lee interview [with
      Christopher Lydon] has inspired me to think and write about
      how I can improve my 'fractibility' (if there is such a
      word)!)"</cite>
    </p>
    <hr />
    <p>
      <a href="Overview.html">Up to Design Issues</a>
    </p>
    <p>
      <a href="../People/Berners-Lee">Tim BL</a>
    </p>
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