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Current Topic: Miscellaneous |
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The Community Engine Blog: Folksonomy %u2014 One Man%u2019s Experiment |
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Topic: Miscellaneous |
2:48 pm EST, Mar 23, 2005 |
] My experience with folksonomies, ad hoc user-generated ] tags for classifying web content, is that they help you ] understand what the individual who created the tag thinks ] of the content he or she is classifying. By themselves, ] the tags tend to be too ambiguous for inferring too much ] about the web content they are used to classify. However, ] what may be quite useful is seeing who is tagging the ] same web content you are tagging; that way you know you ] may have something real in common. The Community Engine Blog: Folksonomy %u2014 One Man%u2019s Experiment |
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Topic: Miscellaneous |
2:40 pm EST, Mar 23, 2005 |
] Yesterday I had another person comment to me that tags ] looked too like Meta keywords in html pages, and that ] we'd pretty much discarded those because they got spammed ] to death. ]... ] Imagine for a moment that Craigslist discards it's broken ] sucky category system and switches to a folksonomy.... ] This will quickly degenerate in an escalating war of tag ] placement and destroy the folksonomy.... ] ] # Maximum number of tags on a post. Well ok. But you ] could still do serious damage with 255 tags. So where's ] the limit? ] # Allow others to edit a posts tags. Won't this just ] stress the system as tag edit wars break out? ] # Allow others to add tags but give them less weight. ] Tricky to fine tune. ] # Combine with a reputation system that devalues people ] who tag spam. We're on a rising complexity curve here. ] # Administrator moderation. Adding a controlling human to ] the system is not going to work. We're back to librarians ] and site owner hate and it doesn't scale. ] ] What we need is some positive social feedback loops that ] denegrate bad tagging and reward good tagging. Discussion on the means that the present folksonomies use to disrupt spamming, and where it could go. This isn't really a fear for the 'stream though. Complexity is already there. Voidstar - On Tag Spam |
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Many-to-Many: Tags run amok! |
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Topic: Miscellaneous |
2:33 pm EST, Mar 23, 2005 |
] "Social software is stuff that gets spammed." Clay Shirkley has a way with words. Many-to-Many: Tags run amok! |
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Tagging Not Likely The Killer Solution For Search |
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Topic: Miscellaneous |
2:28 pm EST, Mar 23, 2005 |
] In case you've missed it, there's been an explosion of ] interest in "tagging," the idea that if everyone labels ] photos, blogs and so on, we'll more easily be able to ] find what we're looking for. But all the interest (dare I ] say hype) is largely ignoring the fact that we've had ] tagging on the web for going on 10 years, and the ] experience on the search side is that it can't be ] trusted. Tagging Not Likely The Killer Solution For Search |
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[print version] Yahoo's game of photo tag | CNET News.com |
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Topic: Miscellaneous |
2:24 pm EST, Mar 23, 2005 |
] Free tagging could help Web search in a couple of ways. ] If Yahoo or Google could enlist people to annotate ] visited Web pages or those which crop up in search ] results, it could be a valuable voter's guide for them to ] deliver better results next time. Imagine. A site where people write commentary and annotation of the sites they come across. For free. Propagating memes. How unlikely. ] A key byproduct of free tagging for search would be a ] visitor loyalty coveted by all the providers. As many ] researchers point out, the cost to switch search engines ] is nothing, compared with instant messaging technologies, ] e-mail, or applications that carry what's called "the ] network effect." [print version] Yahoo's game of photo tag | CNET News.com |
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Trouble Brewing over Google News Transparency | Threadwatch.org |
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Topic: Miscellaneous |
12:14 pm EST, Mar 23, 2005 |
] Google News, fresh from being sued by the French press ] and subsequently backing down and pulling the AFP's ] stories, is right back in at the deep end. This time, the ] question of transparency comes up in relation to it's ] non-disclosed news sources and nazi websites being ] featured on the Search engine's algorithmic news portal. ]... ] Philipp hits the nail on the head though when he quite ] rightly states that Google do indeed have editorial ] control, they choose the sites that appear in Google News ] - In other words, someone looked at a neo-nazi white ] pride hate site and said "oh my, that just has to be in G ] news...." Yet more evidence of Google misstepping. I should have called it when I saw it, how Google was going to fall. Fall from the graces as the Can Do No Wrong folks. The common fall for such a tech company is to slow down in their rate of innovation, have their technology surpassed. They have been smart enough to prevent that; ever new release is a new domain killer, pushing the limits of our expectations and released at a sufficent frenzy as behoves such a giant talent-suck with such visible and easy to change products [ie, DEC in its heyday couldn't put out something substantial every 6 months]. And the general fear with Google was that they would be too powerful, and Evil Empire status would fall upon them just because they found themselves ruling the world; people couldn't live without them, and no one could compete with them. That has not yet quite happened, although it occasionally looks like it. No, the problem is that the business was smart enough about keeping their tech edge, and felt like to do so they needed to preserve their corporate culture. Unfortunately, one part of their culture that may have worked for them as a small company with a killer product, is a lack of communication. Reading the Operating Manual, for instance, this was obvious: they are "smart" in their field, and know to emulate the "smart" people in fields they find themselves now in; but without a deep understanding of the field, fall short. Buffett gives deep descriptions of his company in a way they do not. The maneuvers he does are generally transparent to a watching crowd, because of the SEC requirements tracking investments. And his annual meetings. Google refuses to be answerable to the public, and to the finance community, and as long as nothing "bad" happens, they will get away with it. But things like this essay point out that their reputation is already being tarnished. The Trust In Google metric is down. And at the end of the day, most of what they do relies on it. Trouble Brewing over Google News Transparency | Threadwatch.org |
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New Scientist Breaking News - Classic maths puzzle cracked at last |
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Topic: Miscellaneous |
10:25 am EST, Mar 23, 2005 |
] A number puzzle originating in the work of self-taught ] maths genius Srinivasa Ramanujan nearly a century ago has ] been solved. The solution may one day lead to advances in ] particle physics and computer security. New Scientist Breaking News - Classic maths puzzle cracked at last |
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BBC NEWS | Europe | Fischer 'put Iceland on the map' |
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Topic: Miscellaneous |
9:31 am EST, Mar 23, 2005 |
] Iceland's parliament voted overwhelmingly this week to ] grant Mr Fischer citizenship - and with it an Icelandic ] passport. BBC NEWS | Europe | Fischer 'put Iceland on the map' |
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New Scientist 13 things that do not make sense - Features |
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Topic: Miscellaneous |
11:46 pm EST, Mar 22, 2005 |
] 13 things that do not make sense Great article pointing out some of the very open gaps in our understanding of the who and what of existence. 1. The Placebo Effect 2. The Horizon Problem 3. Ultra-Energetic Cosmic Rays 4. Belfast Homeopathy Results 5. Dark Matter 6. Viking's Methane 7. Tetraneutrons 8. The Pioneer Anomaly 9. Dark Energy 10. The Kuiper Cliff 11. The Wow Signal 12. Not-so-constant Constants 13. Cold Fusion Typical New Scientist approachability. New Scientist 13 things that do not make sense - Features |
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F-Secure : News from the Lab |
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Topic: Miscellaneous |
1:42 pm EST, Mar 22, 2005 |
] The hexedited files that Drever.C tries to use to damage ] F-Secure Mobile Anti-Virus, contain message intended to ] us. ] ] FSECURE MUST DIE!!!!!! ] Please, don't make new antiviruses for my viruses and I ] stop make ] viruses for your antiviruses. My target is Simworks! ] =) ] ] Thanks for the warning, but I don't think we are stopping ] any time soon. A couple of months ago, cell phone virii were a new and novel concept. Now we're getting three releases in a day, and ones targetting the free anti-viral tools... F-Secure : News from the Lab |
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