The Website Specification

(specification.website)

69 points | by k1m 1 hour ago

14 comments

  • Latty 32 minutes ago
    "Agent Readiness" will likely age as well as "Web 4.0 Blockchain Integration" has.

    (To be entirely clear, not because agents won't be a relevant thing, although certainly I have my doubts, but because I believe even if they are a relevant thing, requiring special allowances from sites undermines the whole point, and such things will only end up used by bad actors to mismatch what agents see to what humans see, and so will be intentionally ignored.)

    • k1m 3 minutes ago
      With how bloated and ad-ridden websites have become, I'd love the pure text version for us humans - let the agents deal with stuff intended for us. But I also have my doubts we'll see that.

      Regarding the bad actors point, that's been possible for a long time - e.g. serving up different content for search engine crawlers than the user sees when they click through. If I remember correctly, there was a time Google penalised sites that did this.

    • kijin 11 minutes ago
      Yeah, the entire suite of proposed "standards" catering to agents looks like a temporary measure to duct-tape over the limitations and token costs of today's agents. They'll churn as quickly as Anthropic, Google, OpenAI et al. can release new versions of their frontier models.
  • pratikdeoghare 0 minutes ago
    Having such a list is great. I am all for such lists.

    BUT

    Some people memorize these things. Take them too seriously. You are thought stupid if you don't know them. Somewhere someone then makes a story on Jira to verify that your product does all of these things and you have to convince them that we are fine without them or we don't need all of them etc.

  • baliex 25 minutes ago
    What a great resource. As someone who’s been making websites for 30 years, it’s amazing to still be picking up some of the basics. Though to be fair many of these didn’t exist back then.

    I’ll be using this to add some extra tags to my pages.

    It looks like there are some features noted as “required” that are actually required by the spec (e.g. a title tag), and others that are required by opinion (e.g. https) so there’s an element^ of pragmatic best practice being recommended.

    I find it curious that setting a colour hint for the browser is recommended. I’m one for letting the browser look as vanilla as possible and letting my pages do the talking.

    ^Pun not intended, blink and you’ll miss it

  • zophi 47 minutes ago
    Hmm wondering how common some of these are ... I'd love /.well-known/change-password but it looks like https://news.ycombinator.com/.well-known/change-password and google.com/.well-known/change-password don't seem to be implemented?
    • king_zee 29 minutes ago
      security.txt is always under this folder for sites if it exists, it's also used by letsencrypt for certs or renewals fail
  • franze 35 minutes ago
    llms.txt is supported by 0 of the relevant ai providers and must be seen as harmful

    .. as the webmaster implemented something that they might thought has an impact (false sense of impact), but has zero

    so net gain negative

    i consider such lists harmful - a good website is one that supports the goal of the website providers and its desired users (some of these users might be bots)

    a bad website is a website that does everything for everyone just because

  • incognitoninja 40 minutes ago
    This seems good especially as beginner still face deep in the weeds of just the pure introductory functional concepts
  • selfhoster1312 32 minutes ago
    This looks like slop from a slop factory. "SEO", "Agent-readiness". That's precisely what a good website doesn't do (to paraphrase the homepage).

    Oh yes, it's produced by a Wordpress "SEO" expert and private investor using Claude LLM. What a surprise. A man who built a fortune destroying the internet we loved with advertisement slop now working on destroying whatever's left with LLM slop.

  • WA 50 minutes ago
    .well-known/security is listed as a prominent example, but is not in the well-known category.
    • 8cvor6j844qw_d6 32 minutes ago
      Useful reference https://securitytxt.org/

      Though some sites drop it at the root /security.txt instead of /.well-known/security.txt

      Note, invites beg bounties spam.

    • kijin 20 minutes ago
      It's in the "Security" category. I guess whatever categorization scheme they're using doesn't allow assigning multiple categories per item.
  • sinansaka 50 minutes ago
    This is pretty cool, didnt even know of half the options under well-known urls. Thanks!
  • mschuster91 22 minutes ago
    I heavily assume this is at least partially AI generated... but I have to admit, this is actually useful (aka, human driven). Nice work.
  • throwaw12 1 hour ago
    Looks interesting, can you convert it to a skill with bunch of scripts to validate those guidelines and use it to build the websites?
  • cbm-vic-20 38 minutes ago
  • vladsiu 20 minutes ago
    [dead]
  • nimitlabs 35 minutes ago
    Great!