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Matthias Wauer Mohamed Sherif Muhammad Saleem Olaf Hartig Ricardo Usbeck Ruben Verborgh Axel-Cyrille Ngonga Ngomo (Eds.) Joint Proceedings of GeoLD2018 and QuWeDa2018: 3rd International Workshop on Geospatial Linked Data / 2nd Workshop on Querying the Web of Data (GeoLD-QuWeDa2018) co-located with 15th Extended Semantic Web Conference 2018 Heraklion, Greece, June 3-4, 2018 c 2018 for the individual papers by the papers’ authors, unless indicated other- wise. Copying permitted for private and academic purposes. Re-publication of material from this volume requires permission by the copyright owners, unless indicated otherwise. Primary Editors’ address: Universität Leipzig Universitätsrechenzentrum Augustusplatz 10 04109 Leipzig, Germany matthias.wauer@uni-leipzig.de Preface GeoLD 2018 Geospatial data is vital for many application scenarios, such as navigation, lo- gistics, and tourism. At the same time, a large number of currently available datasets (both RDF and conventional) contain geospatial information. Exam- ples include DBpedia, Wikidata, Geonames, OpenStreetMap and its RDF coun- terpart, LinkedGeoData. RDF stores have become robust and scalable enough to support volumes of billions of records (RDF triples). Likewise, geospatial in- formation systems (GIS) can benefit from Linked Data principles (e.g., schema agility and interoperability). Despite improving implementations and standards such as GeoSPARQL, traditional geospatial data management systems still have advantages in func- tionality, efficiency and scalability regarding geospatial content. In this third edition of the workshop on Geospatial Linked Data, about 20 participants have discussed the current state of GeoLD tools, applications and novel research. After a short introduction by the organizing committee chair, Ali Khalili presented a convincing approach to a concept called Functional Urban Areas. Several tools, also targeted towards end-users, can be used for integrating Linked Data within spatial boundaries extracted from different datasets. He showed how this combination of data can provide new insights that aren’t captured by the data provided by the OECD1 . The only weakness of this paper is a lack of related work, resulting in a best workshop paper nomination. Alan Meehan then discussed an approach for fine-grained access control on geospatial data. He argued that a combination of template and licence, de- scribed by novel RDF vocabularies, would provide the necessary restrictions for the analysed use cases. Although the paper contains a section on related work, the authors do not compare against these or comment on another approach for fine-grained access control in Apache Rya, as suggested by a reviewer. After a coffee break, Finn Årup Nielsen presented an extension to their website visualising scientific data from Wikidata. While the presented use cases and maps were interesting for the audience, reviewers argued that the method of how the queries are generated is not made clear. In the following short paper presentation, Peru Bhardwaj explained the is- sues she ran into when executing link discovery. This talk was controversial and caused a lively discussion with the audience. While some improvement sug- gestions should be addressed by the link discovery tool developers, it remained unclear why the application of unsupervised or active learning approaches was not successful. Finally, Matthias Wauer presented an early version of a platform for integra- tion geospatial and sensor data. Using semantic technologies and a message bus based on RabbitMQ, the approach and implementation were motivated by three use cases. The discussion with the audience led to the suggestion of comparing 1 Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development 3 the approach with the Linked Data Notifications W3C recommendation which could be relevant. To summarize, the workshop discussed many aspects of geospatial linked data, perhaps with the notable exception of data quality. An audience member concluded that now that there are several full-featured GeoSPARQL-capable stores and other tools available, it will be interesting to see which applications will be possible in recent years. The importance of the topic was further high- lighted by several presentations in the ”Semantic Geo Resources” session of the main conference. We thank the authors for their submissions and the program committee for their hard work. June 2018 Matthias Wauer, Mohamed Sherif, Axel-Cyrille Ngonga Ngomo GeoLD 2018 Organizing Committee Matthias Wauer, Universität Leipzig Mohamed Sherif, Universität Paderborn Axel-Cyrille Ngonga Ngomo, Universität Paderborn GeoLD 2018 Program Committee Claus Stadler, University of Leipzig Manolis Koubarakis, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens Fabrizio Orlandi, Fraunhofer IAIS Andreas Harth, KIT Michael Martin, Institute for Applied Informatics Anisa Rula, Fraunhofer IAIS Giorgos Giannopoulos, Athena Institute for the Management of Information Systems Kleanthi Georgala, University of Leipzig Roman Korf, USU Software AG Harsh Thakkar, Fraunhofer IAIS Muhammad Saleem, University of Leipzig Richard Wacker, YellowMap AG Tim Ermilov, University of Leipzig Henning Hasemann, TomTom Ricardo Usbeck, University of Paderborn Konstantina Bereta, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens Ivan Ermilov, University of Leipzig Johannes Trame, metaphacts 4 QuWeDa 2018 The constant growth of Linked Open Data (LOD) on the Web opens new chal- lenges pertaining to querying such massive amounts of publicly available data. LOD datasets are available through various interfaces, such as data dumps, SPARQL endpoints and triple pattern fragments. In addition, various sources produce streaming data. Efficiently querying these sources is of central impor- tance for the scalability of Linked Data and Semantic Web technologies. The trend of publicly available and interconnected data is shifting the focus of Web technologies towards new paradigms of Linked Data querying. To exploit the massive amount of LOD data to its full potential, users should be able to query and combine this data easily and effectively. This workshop at the Extended Se- mantic Web Conference (ESWC) presented original articles describing theoreti- cal and practical methods and techniques for fostering, querying, and consuming the Data Web. The workshop brought together members of the community in- terested in demonstrating their latest advances in query processing systems for RDF. The event fostered discussion for proposing novel RDF query processing techniques, language extension, and benchmarking and experimental evaluation of the engines. June 2018 Saleem Muhammad, Olaf Hartig, Ricardo Usbeck, Ruben Verborgh, Axel-Cyrille Ngonga Ngomo 5 QuWeDa 2018 Organizing Committee Saleem Muhammad, Universität Leipzig Olaf Hartig, Linköping University Ricardo Usbeck, Universität Paderborn Ruben Verborgh, Ghent University Axel-Cyrille Ngonga Ngomo, Universität Paderborn QuWeDa 2018 Program Committee Axel Polleres, WU Wien Stasinos Konstantopoulos, NCSR Demokritos Maribel Acosta, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology Aidan Hogan, DCC, Universidad de Chile Harald Sack, FIZ Karlsruhe, Leibniz Institute for Info. Infr. and KIT Karlsruhe Pascal Molli, University of Nantes - LS2N Steffen Staab, WeST, Univ. Koblenz-Landau and WAIS, Univ. of Southampton Peter Haase, metaphacts Andreas Schwarte, fluid Operations AG Sören Auer, TIB Leibniz Information Center Science+Tech. / Univ. Hannover Alessandro Adamou, The Open University Gong Cheng, Nanjing University Giuseppe Pirrò, Institute for High Performance Computing and Networking Andriy Nikolov, metaphacts GmbH Danh Le Phuoc, TU Berlin Oscar Corcho, Universidad Politécnica de Madrid Katja Hose, Aalborg University Stefan Dietze, L3S Research Center Carlos Buil Aranda, Universidad Técnica Federico Santa Marı́a Luis Ibanez-Gonzalez, University of Southampton Enrico Daga, The Open University Hala Skaf-Molli, Nantes University Stefan Schlobach, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam Valeria Fionda, University of Calabria Vanessa Lopez, IBM Ali Hasnain, Insight Centre for Data Analytics Olivier Corby, INRIA 6 Contents Using Linked Open Geo Boundaries for Adaptive Delineation of Functional Urban Areas Ali Khalili, Peter van den Besselaar, and Klaas Andries de Graaf 9 License and Template Access Control for Geospatial Linked Data Alan Meehan, Kaniz Fatema, Rob Brennan Eamonn Clinton, Lorraine McNerney, and Declan O’Sullivan 22 Geospatial data and Scholia Finn Årup Nielsen, Daniel Mietchen, and Egon Willighagen 34 On the Overlooked Challenges of Link Discovery Peru Bhardwaj, Christophe Debruyne, and Declan O’Sullivan 41 Towards a Semantic Message-driven Microservice Platform for Geospatial and Sensor Data Matthias Wauer and Axel-Cyrille Ngonga Ngomo 47 Benchmarking Commercial RDF Stores with Publications Office Dataset Ghislain Auguste Atemezing and Florence Amardeilh 59 Heuristics-based Query Reordering for Federated Queries in SPARQL 1.1 and SPARQL-LD Thanos Yannakis, Pavlos Fafalios and Yannis Tzitzikas 74 7 8