@ -157,7 +157,7 @@ Then it is possible to add new triples in the this Document, and the ID of the d
In this Document/Named Graph, the user can add triples, and most of the time, they will add triples that have this Document ID as subject. That's what we call **authoritative triples** because we know that the subject is the same ID as the named graph, (as the document ID) and because we have signatures on every commit and also threshold signatures too, then we can prove that those triples have been authored by the users that claim to be members of such document.
In order to facilitate adding those kind of authoritative triples with a SPARQL UPDATE, or to retrieve them with a SPARQL QUERY, the user has access to the BASE shortcut, which is `<>` in SPARQL, and that represents the current document. it will be replaced internally by the exact ID of the current document. This placeholder is handy and helps you manipulate the authoritative triples of your document.
In order to facilitate adding those kind of authoritative triples with a SPARQL UPDATE, or to retrieve them with a SPARQL QUERY, the user has access to the BASE shortcut, which is `<>` in SPARQL, and that represents the current document. it will be replaced internally by the exact ID of the current document. This placeholder is handy and helps you manipulate the authoritative triples of your document. The default graph of any SPARQL Query is also the current Document, so you do not need to specify it explicitly (except when you select the "Query all docs" option, i this case, the default graph is the union graph of all the graphs).
If we had stoped here, there would be no real interest in having a named graph mechanism.