Social Tagging, and Networking through Weblogs

A topic that has had my gears spinning for weeks now... the “tagging“ phenomenon is introducing us in real-time to a new set of technologies that, without a doubt, will revolutionize the way we work with the web.  Tagging weblogs a powerful concept.  We're all experts in something.  We're all passionate about something... if you're like myself, you're passionate about any number of things at any time... things that keep you focused, things that keep you up at night.  Well... last night was one of those nights, and after about 2 and a half hours of scribbling thoughts and ideas down, I could finally fall asleep.

 

I woke up early to organize these thoughts, and ended up with this rough outline.  I will be working through it, and will enjoy a ring-side view of these technologies as they evolve and flourish.  There are a number of concepts within this outline that should be covered, but haven't been filled out yet.  I also used very esoteric examples, that should be abstracted a bit, so they make sense to non-programmer types.

 

I believe that it is the passions that make us human, that drive us to be successful (whatever that means to you).  By sharing our interests, experiences, and expertise, we can turn our collective passions into a knowledge network that will expand our horizons far beyond anything we could ever imagine.

 

It's a work in progress, but for now at least, I would appreciate any insight on where to go with it. 

 

Topics:

  • Taxonomy (wikipedia)
  • Folksonomy – Taxonomy through informal, subjective tagging (wikipedia) (del.icio.us)
  • Neural networks (wikipedia)
    • Blogosphere as a neural network – associations discovered by studying users’ usage patterns, and authors’ subject patterns
    • Unassociated content becomes weakly associated over any use, but strongly associated by either repeated use, or specifically related content, Example:
      • SITE 1: gaming:2, c#:5, asp.net:4, DNN:8
      • SITE 2: CSS:54 (expert who has written specific articles), C#:2, asp.net:8
      • Results:
        • Strong associations made between C# and asp.net
        • Weak associations made between gaming & asp.net, dnn & c#, CSS & c#
        • Very weak associations made between CSS & dnn, CSS & gaming
  • Scale-free networks (wikipedia)
    • Blog sites (via blogrolls, trackbacks, hyperlinks) are linked to each other in a scale-free network topology
    • Hubs by content-type, not necessarily by site
  • Ranking content sources
    • Specificity ex. Photoshop > Graphic Design > Design
      • Intra-domain content relationship ex. CSS à element positioning (finer detail)
    • Association
      • Inter-domain content relationship ex. CSS à XSLT
      • Repetition of associations between content types (repeated associations between gaming and programming)
      • Strong subject associations (2 content sources, otherwise unrelated, but centered on C# Generic Methods)
  • Discovering associations
    • Subject patterns (author patterns, 20% gaming, 70% .Net, 10% untagged)
    • Usage patterns (user navigation, moving from a site that’s 80% C# to a site that’s 30% C# indicates a C# association between those sites, and a preference toward C# for that particular user)
  • Discovering social relations through blogging
    • Gaining an audience
      • Friends & family, referrals
      • Physical marketing (url on business card, website(s), etc)
      • Trackbacks (wikipedia) from related posts on other weblogs
      • Original content that provides value to a community
        • Personally – humor, writing style, stories
        • Educationally – Research, theory, documentation
    • Discovering your niche
      • Don’t hunt for your niche.  Post on what’s in your head right now. Patterns will appear given enough posts on your current experiences.
      • Be conscious of the subjects of your posts, keep good, clean categories and tag your content appropriately.  Always let your posts determine your categories, not the other way around.
  • Natural biology of weblog networks
    • Darwinian (wikipedia) processes rule the environment.  The environment is not just dynamic, but living.
    • Biology (wikipedia) of the Blogosphere
      • Protocol specifications (RSS, ATOM, etc)
      • Posts
      • Taxonomies
      • Behavioral biology: Evolution, diverse content, adaptation, user/site & site/site interactions
    • Ecology (wikipedia) of the Blogosphere
      • Behavioral
      • Community
      • Information flow
      • Global intelligence
  • Blogs enable physical collaboration by discovering associations previously not possible
    • Introductory or collaborative get-togethers (1 on 1, lunch etc.)
    • BOF (wikipedia) – “Birds of a Feather” get-togethers (random-sized groups discussing very specific subjects)
    • Nerd Dinners (site) – Broader subjects, bigger groups
  • The importance of passion
    • Pursue and post about your passions
    • Finding a livelihood that reflects your passions
    • Happiness – ripple effect
    • Positive energy, self-motivation
  • Organizations – getting involved
    • The more specific to your passion & niche, the more valuable your experience with the organization
    • Broad-scoped organizations result in weaker social networks
Print | posted on Friday, January 28, 2005 3:02 PM

Feedback

# re: Social Tagging, and Networking through Weblogs

left by Nick P. at 1/28/2005 3:25 PM Gravatar
Hi Gary,

Just fell across this, but I'm not sure I understand what you are trying to say... Maybe if you define a theory of social tagging, that would help me to see where you are going. It seems like you have a ton of information supporting a theory here, I'm just curious to see how it all relates together.

Thanks,
Nick.

# re: Social Tagging, and Networking through Weblogs

left by casey chesnut at 1/28/2005 4:33 PM Gravatar
i dont get it? has it already been done :

http://clusty.com/ - clustering search engine
http://websom.hut.fi/websom/ - self organizing web pages
http://arxiv.org/PS_cache/cs/pdf/0312/0312047.pdf - mapping weblog communities

# re: Social Tagging, and Networking through Weblogs

left by Gerry at 2/27/2005 11:51 PM Gravatar
Think deeper... more automated.

Associations can come from a common category in our blogs (C#), or it can come from a strong debate between Theism and Athiesm. If we share mutual collaboration, there's an association. If it is in regards to religion, then the key is to figure that out, given the exchanges between us.

(Casey and I met, and discussed this for awhile in person)

The concepts I'm coming to in this post are nothing more than an idea right now. Indeed, we may not even have the technology yet to implement them. There have been quite a few shots in the dark, but none have been able to provide a medium in which our content is identified by title, categories, key words/phrases, collaboration with, or references to, authorities... personal usage analysis that includes immediate context, and historical interests...

Imagine a world where, if a Texas Hold 'Em online service wanted to maximize their visibility online, they would NEED to provide some authoratative content in order to have a chance on this network (as opposed to randomly spamming weblog comments). The only way they would show up on your radar is if you were interested in the game, and your resources were linking to content on the Hold 'Em site's page. Gaining rank and visibility on a subject means either being an authority on a subject, or being a hub (linking-to) a list of authorities. Both of these behaviors would be required for such a network to exist.

The Self-Organized Map information was intriguing, and I'm sure that it would be utilized in order for this idealistic network to come together. After talking to Casey, I think perhaps tagging is overrated, and the key to making such a system work would be discovering content and context directly, without the use of any type of taxonomy-management from the content provider.

# re: Social Tagging, and Networking through Weblogs

left by Scott Isaacs at 3/2/2005 7:41 AM Gravatar
Scoble's link blog is discussing something along the same vein: http://scobleizer.com/linkblog/archives/2193
Title  
Name
Email (never displayed)
Url
Comments   
Please add 1 and 8 and type the answer here: