Machine-Readable Web Glossary
Terms about public content structure, accessible file formats, and AI-visible publishing systems.
The glossary is structured as public term sets and detail pages so both readers and machines can understand the vocabulary that anchors the rest of the site.
Terms about public content structure, accessible file formats, and AI-visible publishing systems.
Terms about agent registries, interoperability layers, and public machine-to-machine discovery surfaces.
Terms about freshness, authority, provenance, and the signals AI systems use to assess reliability.
The AI-readable web is the public content layer that machines can interpret with minimal ambiguity.
A machine-readable website turns structure into a visibility asset instead of hiding everything inside presentation.
A public content catalog is the map that lets machines explore a site without reverse-engineering the whole thing.
Agent registries are visibility infrastructure because they turn software claims into structured public records.
Trust signals are the public evidence layer behind whether a machine chooses to cite or ignore you.
Freshness is not just a date. It is the ongoing public evidence that an asset is still maintained.