Entities and ontologies are among the core components of the semantic web. “Entity” is a term from semantics – it consists of an identifier and associated attributes. As an example, “Barack Obama” would be the identifier in an entity, while information such as “US President”, “lawyer”, “democrat” are the attributes, i.e. descriptive properties. Entities, in turn, can be related to one another and thematically related or different.
If entities stand in a context to one another, they’re called “ontologies”. Ontologies are ordered sets of information and logical statements that are formulated in a way that is readable for humans or machines and that establish connections and show relationships.
Entities and ontologies are essential for the semantic web. Programs use them to understand relationships between words, sentences, images, and characters, intelligently filter multiple meanings and duplicate content, interpret web content, and thematically distinguish entities. In this way, a rich knowledge network is created that consists not only of unstructured information, but also of keywords and addresses. In the future, artificial intelligence will be able to superficially search the accumulated knowledge of the www, and understand and interpret it in a more goal-oriented manner.