📈 Standards Ranked #26–#50

See the Top 25
Web standards are a set of guidelines and specifications that define and describe various aspects of the World Wide Web.

The following list shows the standards ranked from 26th to 50th out of 54 currently tracked.

RankNameMarket share
26
Sitemap

A file in XML format that allows webmasters to inform search engines about URLs on a website that are available for web crawling.

27
Text
Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States

The plain text document format.

28
RelMeAuth

A proposed open standard for using rel-me links to profiles on OAuth supporting services to authenticate via either those profiles or your own site.

29
XML
Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States

A markup language and file format for storing, transmitting, and reconstructing structured data in a platform-independent way.

30
Markdown
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States

A lightweight markup language used to add formatting to plain text documents using simple, human-readable syntax.

31
Humans.txt

A text file that can be created by developers to list the people who have contributed to a website.

32
OpenAPI
San Francisco, California, United States

A specification language for defining HTTP APIs, typically written in YAML or JSON.

33
RDF
Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States

A W3C standard model for describing and exchanging graph-based data on the web.

34
Prerender

The rel="prerender" attribute on HTML elements.

35
IDN

Internationalized Domain Names allow people around the world to use domain names in local languages, such as Arabic, Chinese, or Cyrillic.

36
JSON Web Token
Fremont, California, United States

An open standard (RFC 7519) that defines a compact and self-contained way for securely transmitting information between parties as a JSON object.

37
Rack

A minimal, modular interface and invocation convention that operates between Ruby web servers and web applications to standardize how HTTP requests and responses are exchanged.

FreeOpen source
38
LLMs.txt

A proposed standard that provides structured content and instructions to guide large language models in understanding and summarizing a website's content.

39
WebAssembly
Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States

A portable binary instruction format that runs in modern web browsers with near-native performance, enabling frontend coding in languages that were not traditionally used for web interfaces, such as C/C++, C#, and Rust.

40
Webmention
Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States

A simple protocol to notify any URL when a website links to it, and for web pages to request notifications when somebody links to them.

41
XRDS

An XML-based file format that provides a list of service endpoints (e.g., OpenID) available on a website.

42
AdChoices
New Providence, New Jersey, United States

A self-regulatory standard for online interest-based advertising that gives consumers enhanced control over the collection and use of their data to deliver relevant ads.

43
ActivityPub

A decentralized social networking protocol used by various Fediverse services such as Mastodon, Pixelfed, and PeerTube.

44
OpenTelemetry
San Francisco, California, United States

An open-source, vendor-neutral observability framework and toolkit for collecting, processing, and exporting telemetry data such as traces, metrics, and logs.

45
WCAG
Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States

The Web Content Accessibility Guidelines are an international standard developed by the W3C that defines how to make web content, including text and media, accessible to people with disabilities.

46
Onion

Sites are websites on the dark web that use the .onion top-level domain and are only accessible through online routing through Tor.

47
ESI
Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States

A simple markup language used to define web page components for dynamic assembly and delivery of web applications at the edge of the Internet.

48
XMP
San Jose, California, United States

An ISO standard for creating, processing, and exchanging metadata for digital documents.

49
OpenPGP

A non-proprietary protocol for encrypting email using public key cryptography.

50
IndieAuth
Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States

A decentralized identity protocol built on top of OAuth 2.0.

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