Chapter 2: The Web
Search/Boolean Operators:
A character, word or symbol that focuses a web search.
Wiki:
A collaborative website where you and your colleagues can modify and publish content on a webpage.
Digital Rights Management:
A collection of technologies used by software publishers and trade groups to fight software piracy and prevent unauthorized copying of digital content; includes authentication, certificates of authenticity, encryption and digital watermarks.
Cookies:
A file created by a website and that stores information on your computer, such as your website preferences.
Internet:
A global collection of millions of computers linked together to share information.
Cache:
A holding area where your browser keeps a copy of each webpage you view. This temporary storage area helps speed up processing time.
Hits:
A list of matched results from an Internet Search.
Website:
A location on the World Wide Web that contains webpages linked together.
Internet Engineering Task Force:
A nonprofit group that sets standards to allow devices, services and and applications to work together across the Internet.
Creative Commons:
A nonprofit organization that makes it easy for content creators to license and share their work by supplying easy-to-understand copyright licenses; the creator chooses the conditions under which the work can be used.
General Search Engine:
A nonspecialized search engine designed to find general results.
Browser:
A program that is designed to display webpages.
Hypertext Transfer Protocol Secure:
A protocol used to make a secure connection to a computer, identified by the "https" prefix in a URL and often used by banks and retail stores.
Usage Rights:
A right that indicates when you can use, share or modify the images you find online.
Specialty Search Engine:
A search engine that lets you search databases, news providers, podcasts and other online information sources that general search engines do not always access.
Specialized Search Tools:
A search tool that concentrates on specific resources.
Encryption:
A security method of "scrambling" information as it is transmitted over a network. Information is scrambled in a such a way that it cannot be read unless the user possesses the "key" to unlock it back to a readable format.
World Wide Web:
A service consisting of websites located on computers around the world, connected through the Internet
Webpage:
A specially formatted document that can contain text, graphics, sound, video and links to other webpages.
3D Secure:
A standard protocol for securing credit card transactions over the Internet.
Breadcrumbs:
A step in the path you follow to display a webpage.
Internet Protocol Address:
A unique number that identifies every computer on the Internet; consists of four sets of numbers from 0 to 255 separated by periods.
Web Portal:
A website that combines pages from many sources and provides access to those pages.
Media Sharing Sites:
A website that enables users to manage social media such as photos, videos or music.
Content Aggregator:
A website that gathers, organizes and then distributes web content.
Fair Use Doctrine:
Allows you to use a sentence or paragraph of text without permission if you include a citation to the original source.
Web Server:
An Internet computer that stores webpages.
Web Apps:
An app stored on an Internet server that can be run entirely in a web browser.
Electronic Storefront:
An e-commerce website selling products or services.
Search tool:
An electronic tool that finds online information based on criteria you specify or selections you make.
Public Domain:
An item, such as a photo that is available and accessible to the public without requiring permission to use, and therefore not subject to copyright.
Online Social Network:
An online community where users can share their interests, ideas, stories, photos, music or videos with other registered users via a social networking website.
Web/Subject Directory:
An online guide to subjects or websites, usually arranged in alphabetic order.
Copyright:
An originator's exclusive legal right to reproduce, publish or sell intellectual property.
E-Commerce:
Business transactions that occur over an electronic network such as the Internet.
Navigation Bar:
In a browser, a set of buttons or hyperlinks that allow visitors to move to any page within a website.
Citation Style:
In a formal reference to a published work such as a book, journal magazine or website, the sequence of elements and the punctuation between them.
Citation:
In a research paper, a reference to a source; usually in parentheses at the end of a sentence.
Hyperlinks:
In access, a data type for fields that store links to a webpage, file or email address.
Query:
In access, an object that provides a spreadsheet-like view of data, similar to that in tables; it may provide the user with a subset of fields and/or records from one or more tables. Also, SQL commands that are used to retrieve data.
Web:
In computer concepts, a collection webpages located on computers around the world connected through the Internet.
Digital Certificate:
In computer concepts, a technology used to verify a user's identity by using a digital key and that has been "signed" by a trusted third party. This party verifies the owner and that the key belongs to the owner.
Search Engines:
In computer concepts, software used by search sites to locate relevant web pages by creating a simple query based on your search criteria and storing the collected data in a search database.
Address Bar:
In computer concepts, the part of a browser window that displays the location of the current webpage.
Domain Name:
In computer concepts, the portion of a URL or email address that identifies one or more IP addresses.
Navigate:
In computer concepts, to move from one webpage to another in a browser.
Keywords:
In office, terms added to a file's Document Properties that help locate the file in a search.
Intellectual Property Rights:
Legal rights protecting those who create works such as photos, art writing, inventions and music.
World Wide Web Consortium:
One of the leading organizations that sets guidelines for the web and that work together to write web standards.
Blogs:
Short for web log, an informal website consisting of date- or time-stamped articles or posts, in a diary or journal format.
Spiders/Crawlers:
Software that combs the web to find webpages and add new data about them to the database.
Application:
Software that lets users perform specific tasks.
Transport Layer Security:
Technology used to encrypt data that helps protect consumers and businesses from fraud and identity theft when conducting commerce over the Internet.
Information Literacy:
The ability to find, evaluate, use and communicate online information.
Word Stem:
The base of a word, used in a web search to broaden a search.
Home/Start Page:
The main webpage around which a website is built around every time you open a browser.
Ethics:
The moral principles that govern people's behavior; many schools and other organizations post codes of conduct for computer use, which can help you make ethical decisions while using a computer.
Hypertext Transfer Protocol:
The most common way to transfer information around the web; when the URL for a webpage starts with http://, the web browser uses this protocol for transferring the information.
Top-Level Domain:
The three-letter extension after the period in a domain name, the TLD identifies the type of organization associated with the domain.
Uniform Resource Locator:
The webpage address that identifies the location of the file on the Internet.
Plagiarism:
To copy or use someone else's work and claim it as your own.
Paraphrase:
To restate an idea using different words from the original; paraphrasing someone else's idea still constitutes plagiarism, which is claiming someone else's idea as your own