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One of the nagging theoretical problems in the Web architecture has been finding so-called “site-wide metadata”; i.e., finding something out about a Web site before you access it. We wrestled with this in P3P way back when, and the TAG took it up after that.
The easy solution to this is to define a static “well-known” URL — like /robots.txt. However, having a third party come along and squat on part of every Web site’s URL namespace is less than friendly, and eventually it’ll lead to conflicts.
So, in a less-than-ideal but practical solution, RFC5785 now defines a sandbox for these well-known URIs — /.well-known/, and provides a registry for them to assure that they won’t conflict.
alrra
changed the title
Allow access to the /.well-known/ hidden directory
Allow access to the content from within the /.well-known/ directory.
Jun 2, 2014
From https://www.mnot.net/blog/2010/04/07/well-known:
See also: http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc5785
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