• Folksonomy https://store.theartofservice.com/the-folksonomy- toolkit.html
• Folksonomy
https://store.theartofservice.com/the-folksonomy-toolkit.html
Flickr - Organization
1 Flickr asks photo submitters to organize images using tags (a form of metadata), which enable searchers to find images related to particular
topics, such as place names or subject matter. Flickr was also an early website to implement tag clouds, which provide access to images
tagged with the most popular keywords. Because of its support for tags, Flickr has been
cited as a prime example of effective use of folksonomy, although Thomas Vander Wal
suggested that Flickr is not the best example.
https://store.theartofservice.com/the-folksonomy-toolkit.html
Tag (metadata) - Advantages and disadvantages
1 When users can freely choose tags (creating a folksonomy, as opposed to
selecting terms from a controlled vocabulary), the resulting metadata can include homonyms (the same tags used with different meanings) and synonyms (multiple tags for the same concept),
which may lead to inappropriate connections between items and inefficient searches for information about a subject
https://store.theartofservice.com/the-folksonomy-toolkit.html
Tag (metadata) - Complex system dynamics
1 This informal collaborative system of tag creation and management has been called a
folksonomy.
https://store.theartofservice.com/the-folksonomy-toolkit.html
Social software - Social libraries
1 This applications allows visitors to keep track of their collectibles, books, records
and DVDs. Users can share their collections. Recommendations can be generated based
on user ratings, using statistical computation and network theory. Some
sites offer a buddy system, as well as virtual "check outs" of items for borrowing among
friends. Folksonomy or tagging is implemented on most of these sites.
https://store.theartofservice.com/the-folksonomy-toolkit.html
Geotagging - Geotagging in tag-based systems
1 No industry standards exist, however there are a variety of techniques for adding geographical
identification metadata to an information resource. One convention, established by the website Geobloggers and used by more and
more sites, e.g. photo sharing sites Panoramio and Flickr, and the social bookmarking site
del.icio.us, enables content to be found via a location search. All sites allow users to add
metadata to an information resource via a set of so-called machine tags (see folksonomy).
https://store.theartofservice.com/the-folksonomy-toolkit.html
Digital identity - Taxonomies of identity
1 Folksonomy|Free-tagging has emerged recently as an effective way
of circumventing this challenge (to date, primarily with application to the
identity of digital entities such as bookmarks and photos) by effectively
flattening identity attributes into a single, unstructured layer
https://store.theartofservice.com/the-folksonomy-toolkit.html
43 Things
1 This concept is also known as folksonomy
https://store.theartofservice.com/the-folksonomy-toolkit.html
IoBridge
1 'ioBridge' is a manufacturer of Internet-based monitor and control
hardware and a provider of seamlessly integrated cloud-based
social Web 2.0 folksonomy|folksonomies and curated online API webservices, using WebSocket, JSON
and a host of other related technologies.
https://store.theartofservice.com/the-folksonomy-toolkit.html
Last.fm - Tags
1 Last.fm supports end-user tag (metadata)|tagging or labeling of
artists, albums, and tracks to create a site-wide folksonomy of music
https://store.theartofservice.com/the-folksonomy-toolkit.html
Photo sharing - Photos classification
1 Another mechanism is coupling taxonomy and folksonomy, where tags associated to galleries and
artists are cascaded to the galleries and artist's pictures
https://store.theartofservice.com/the-folksonomy-toolkit.html
Contemporary era - Information age and computers
1 Examples include Social network service|social-networking sites, video
sharing|video-sharing sites, wikis, blogs, Mashup (digital)|mashups and
Folksonomy|folksonomies
https://store.theartofservice.com/the-folksonomy-toolkit.html
Web 2.0
1 A Web 2.0 site may allow users to interact and collaborate with each other in a Social Media
dialogue as creators of user-generated content in a virtual community, in contrast to websites
where people are limited to the passive viewing of Content (media and publishing)|content. Examples of Web 2.0 include social networking sites, blogs, wikis, Folksonomy|
folksonomies, video sharing sites, Web service|hosted services, web applications, and
Mashup (web application hybrid)|mashups.
https://store.theartofservice.com/the-folksonomy-toolkit.html
Web 2.0 - Characteristics
1 # Folksonomy- free classification of information; allows users to collectively classify and find
information (e.g. Tag_(metadata)|Tagging)
https://store.theartofservice.com/the-folksonomy-toolkit.html
Web 2.0 - Concepts
1 : Categorization of content by users adding tags — short, usually one-word descriptions — to facilitate
searching, without dependence on pre-made categories. Collections of tags created by many users within a single system may be referred to as
folksonomy|folksonomies (i.e., Folk#Etymology|folk Taxonomy
(general)|taxonomies).https://store.theartofservice.com/the-folksonomy-toolkit.html
Social bookmarking
1 Tagging is a significant feature of social bookmarking systems,
enabling users to organize their bookmarks in flexible ways and
develop shared vocabularies known as folksonomy|folksonomies.
https://store.theartofservice.com/the-folksonomy-toolkit.html
Social bookmarking - Common features
1 Folksonomy is also called social tagging, the process by which many users add metadata in the form of
keywords to shared content.
https://store.theartofservice.com/the-folksonomy-toolkit.html
Social bookmarking - Folksonomy
1 Once such stable distributions form, the correlations between different tags can be examined to construct
simple folksonomy graphs, which can be efficiently partitioned to obtain a
form of community or shared vocabularies.V
https://store.theartofservice.com/the-folksonomy-toolkit.html
Social bookmarking - Folksonomy
1 From the point of view of search data, there are drawbacks to such
tag-based systems: no standard set of keywords (i.e., a folksonomy
instead of a controlled vocabulary), no standard for the structure of such
tags (e.g., singular vs
https://store.theartofservice.com/the-folksonomy-toolkit.html
Web 1.0 - Characteristics
1 move from personal websites to blogs and blog site aggregation, from publishing to participation, from web content as the outcome of large up-front investment to an ongoing and
interactive process, and from content management systems to links based
on tagging (folksonomy).
https://store.theartofservice.com/the-folksonomy-toolkit.html
Collective intelligence - Social bookmarking
1 In social bookmarking (also called collaborative tagging), users assign tags to
resources shared with other users, which gives rise to a type of information organisation that emerges from this crowdsourcing process. The resulting information structure can be seen as
reflecting the collective knowledge (or collective intelligence) of a community of
users and is commonly called a Folksonomy, and the process can be captured by models of
collaborative tagging.
https://store.theartofservice.com/the-folksonomy-toolkit.html
Collective intelligence - Social bookmarking
1 Once such stable distributions form, examining the correlations between different tags can be used to construct simple folksonomy graphs,
which can be efficiently partitioned to obtained a form of community or shared
vocabularies.Valentin Robu, Harry Halpin, Hana Shepherd [http://portal.acm.org/citation.cfm?
id=1594173.1594176 Emergence of consensus and shared vocabularies in collaborative tagging systems], ACM Transactions on the Web (TWEB), Vol
https://store.theartofservice.com/the-folksonomy-toolkit.html
Folksonomy
1 Folksonomy, a term coined by Thomas Vander Wal, is a
portmanteau of folk and Taxonomy (general)|taxonomy.
https://store.theartofservice.com/the-folksonomy-toolkit.html
Folksonomy
1 While both broad and narrow folksonomies enable the
searchability of content by adding textual description - or access points - to an object, a narrow folksonomy
does not have the same benefits as a broad folksonomy, which allows for the tracking of emerging trends in
tag usage and developing vocabularies
https://store.theartofservice.com/the-folksonomy-toolkit.html
Folksonomy
1 However, tag clouds visualize only the vocabulary but not the structure
of folksonomies, as do tag graphs.Lohmann, S., Diáz, P.:
[http://www.vis.uni-stuttgart.de/~lohmansn/publications/FolksonomyRefer
enceModel.pdf Representing and Visualizing Folksonomies as Graphs -
A Reference Model], Proc
https://store.theartofservice.com/the-folksonomy-toolkit.html
Folksonomy - Origin
1 Folksonomy has little to do with Taxonomy (biology)|taxonomy — the
latter refers to an ontological, hierarchical way of categorizing,
while folksonomy establishes categories (each tag is a category) that are theoretically equal to each other (i.e., there is no hierarchy, or
parent-child relation between different tags).
https://store.theartofservice.com/the-folksonomy-toolkit.html
Folksonomy - Origin
1 Folksonomy also includes a set of URLs that are used to identify
resources that have been referred by users of different websites
https://store.theartofservice.com/the-folksonomy-toolkit.html
Folksonomy - Origin
1 An example of a narrow folksonomies can be found in systems used by large businesses; these types of folksonomy are mainly used for research and associates working together in collaborative groups.
https://store.theartofservice.com/the-folksonomy-toolkit.html
Folksonomy - Origin
1 Early attempts and experiments include the World Wide Web
Consortium's Annotea project with user-generated tags in 2002.M.
Koivunen, [http://kmi.open.ac.uk/events/usersw
eb/papers/01_koivunen_final.pdf Annotea and Semantic Web
Supported Annotation]. According to Vander Wal, a folksonomy is tagging
that works.https://store.theartofservice.com/the-folksonomy-toolkit.html
Folksonomy - Origin
1 Folksonomy is unrelated to folk taxonomy, a cultural practice that has been widely documented in anthropological and
folkloristics|folkloristic work. Folk taxonomies are culturally supplied, intergenerationally
transmitted, and relatively stable classification systems that people in a given culture use to make sense of the entire world around them (not just the Internet).Berlin, B.
(1992). Ethnobiological Classification. Princeton: Princeton University Press.
https://store.theartofservice.com/the-folksonomy-toolkit.html
Folksonomy - Semantic Web
1 [ http://jis.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/30/4/310 JIS: Internet search
engines' response to metadata Dublin Core implementation] In
contrast to more formalized, top-down classifications using controlled vocabulary|controlled vocabularies,
folksonomy is a distributed classification system with low entry
costs.Corey Ahttps://store.theartofservice.com/the-folksonomy-toolkit.html
Folksonomy - Folksontology
1 In Proceedings of the 11th International Conference on Knowledge Management and
Knowledge Technologies, ACM, New York, NY, USA, 2011 Folksonomy looks to categorize tags and thus
create browsable spaces of information that are easy to maintain
and expand.
https://store.theartofservice.com/the-folksonomy-toolkit.html
Social Semantic Web - Overview
1 The socio-semantic web may be seen as a middle way between the top-
down monolithic taxonomy approach like the Yahoo! Directory and the more recent collaborative tagging
(folksonomy) approaches.
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Social Semantic Web - Overview
1 First, users could create a folksonomy
(flat taxonomy)
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Freebase - Organization and policy
1 [U]nlike the W3C approach to the semantic web, which starts with controlled ontologies, Metaweb
adopts a folksonomy approach, in which people can add new categories (much like tags), in a messy sprawl
of potentially overlapping assertions.
https://store.theartofservice.com/the-folksonomy-toolkit.html
Enterprise bookmarking - Tag management
1 Enterprise bookmarking tools also differ from social bookmarking tools in the way that they
often face an existing Taxonomy (general)|taxonomy. Some of these tools have evolved
to provide Tag management which is the combination of uphill abilities (e.g. faceted
classification, predefined tags, etc.) and downhill gardening abilities (e.g. tag
renaming, moving, merging) to better manage the bottom-up folksonomy
generated from user tagging.
https://store.theartofservice.com/the-folksonomy-toolkit.html
Peer-to-Patent - Community review
1 After a patent is published on the Peer To Patent web site, the public can post not only instances of possible prior art, but other useful comments
such as common industry terms that might describe the patent. These terms, or
Folksonomy tags, are useful to help other experts find prior art. The review process
emphasizes and supports group collaboration in the following
ways.[http://dotank.nyls.edu/communitypatent/P2Panniversaryreport.pdf Peer To Patent first
anniversary report, June 2008]
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Faceted search - Development
1 It has become the prevailing user interaction mechanism in e-commerce sites and is being extended to deal with semi-structured data, continuous
dimensions, and Folksonomy | folksonomies.[http://facetedsearch.g
ooglepages.com SIGIR'2006 Workshop on Faceted Search - Call
for Participation]https://store.theartofservice.com/the-folksonomy-toolkit.html
Boise, Idaho - Parts of the city
1 In January 2014 the Boise Police Department partnered with the
folksonomy|folksonomic neighborhood blogging site Nextdoor, the first city in the Northwest and the
137th city in the U.S
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Web2.0
1 A Web 2.0 site may allow users to interact and collaborate with each other in a social media
dialogue as creators of user-generated content in a virtual community, in contrast to Web
sites where people are limited to the passive viewing of Content (media and publishing)|content. Examples of Web 2.0 include social networking sites, blogs, wikis, Folksonomy|
folksonomies, video sharing sites, Web service|hosted services, Web applications, and
Mashup (web application hybrid)|mashups.
https://store.theartofservice.com/the-folksonomy-toolkit.html
List of social bookmarking websites
1 The sites provide folksonomy-based tagging, sharing features, web feeds,
and bookmarklets to easily add entries. Users can access their bookmarks from any computer.
https://store.theartofservice.com/the-folksonomy-toolkit.html
Delicious (website) - Site description
1 Delicious uses a non-hierarchical classification system in which users can Tag (metadata)|tag
each of their bookmarks with freely chosen index terms (generating a kind of folksonomy).
A combined view of everyone's bookmarks with a given tag is available; for instance, the
URL [http://delicious.com/tag/wiki http://delicious.com/tag/wiki] displays all of
the most recent links tagged wiki. Its collective nature makes it possible to view bookmarks
added by other users.
https://store.theartofservice.com/the-folksonomy-toolkit.html
Faceted classification - Additional Information
1 Faceted classification systems are also distinct from folksonomy|folksonomies or other tagging
systems that do not break out the tags into independent facets.
https://store.theartofservice.com/the-folksonomy-toolkit.html
Card sorting
1 'Card sorting' is a simple technique in user experience design where a group of subject experts or users, however inexperienced with design, are guided to generate a
category tree or folksonomy. It is a useful approach for designing
information architecture, workflows, menu structure, or web site
navigation paths.https://store.theartofservice.com/the-folksonomy-toolkit.html
Knowledge tagging - Complex system dynamics
1 This informal collaborative system of tag creation and management has been called a
folksonomy.
https://store.theartofservice.com/the-folksonomy-toolkit.html
Social information processing - Current state of knowledge
1 ; Tagging : Tag (metadata)|Tagging has already attracted the interest of the AI community. While the initial purpose of tagging was to help users organize and
manage their own documents, it has since been proposed that collective tagging of
common documents can be used to organize information via an informal classification
system dubbed a folksonomy. There is hope that folksonomies will eventually help fulfill
the promise of the Semantic Web.
https://store.theartofservice.com/the-folksonomy-toolkit.html
DMOZ - Hierarchical structure
1 Criticism of DMOZ's hierarchical structure emerged by around 2005. Many believe hierarchical directories
are too complicated. With the emergence of Web 2.0, folksonomy|folksonomies began to appear, and
some editors proposed that folksonomies, network
(mathematics)|networks and directed graphs are more natural and easier
to manage than hierarchies.https://store.theartofservice.com/the-folksonomy-toolkit.html
Art gallery - Folksonomy
1 There are also online galleries that have been developed by a
collaboration of museums and galleries that are more interested
with the categorization of art. They are interested in the potential use of folksonomy within museums and the requirements for post-processing of
terms that have been gathered, both to test their utility and to deploy
them in useful ways.https://store.theartofservice.com/the-folksonomy-toolkit.html
Knowledge environment - Overview
1 tagging or folksonomy|folksonomies
https://store.theartofservice.com/the-folksonomy-toolkit.html
Flickr.com - Organization
1 Flickr has been cited as a prime example of effective use of
folksonomy.
https://store.theartofservice.com/the-folksonomy-toolkit.html
Tripcode - Software
1 There are two primary types of imageboard software packages in widespread use: linearly directed imageboards modeled closely after Futaba Channel (in which content is posted through hierarchical subsections of topical
interest, usually denoted by a forward slash such as /f for female), and nonlinear
imageboards modeled after Danbooru (usually indicated by the usage of controlled
vocabulary|controlled folksonomy|folksonomic vocabulary for topical tagging and search).
https://store.theartofservice.com/the-folksonomy-toolkit.html
Thomas Vander Wal
1 'Thomas Vander Wal' is an information architect best known for coining the term folksonomy.Peters,
Isabella
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Thomas Vander Wal - Folksonomy
1 Folksonomy is sometimes called collaborative tagging, social
classification, social indexing, or social tagging
https://store.theartofservice.com/the-folksonomy-toolkit.html
Thomas Vander Wal - Professional Experience
1 Vander Wal works at InfoCloud Solutions as the Principal and Senior Consultant. InfoClouds Solutions is Vander Wal’s consulting company
that advises on the range of digital content/media, folksonomy/tagging,
social web, and personal to social information use and reuse.
https://store.theartofservice.com/the-folksonomy-toolkit.html
Terry Flew - Social implications of video games
1 He uses the term [http://folksonomy.co/?
keyword=26914 pro-sumer] to describe the group of users who both
consume and produce new media
https://store.theartofservice.com/the-folksonomy-toolkit.html
Brooklyn Museum - Programs
1 The museum has posted many pieces to a digital collection online
which features a user-based tagging system that allows the public to
folksonomy|tag and curate sets of objects online, as well as solicit
additional scholarship contributions.
https://store.theartofservice.com/the-folksonomy-toolkit.html
Symbiotic intelligence - Social bookmarking
1 Once such stable distributions form, examining the correlations between different tags can be used to construct simple folksonomy graphs,
which can be efficiently partitioned to obtained a form of community or shared
vocabularies.Valentin Robu, Harry Halpin, Hana Shepherd [http://portal.acm.org/citation.cfm?
id=1594173.1594176 Emergence of consensus and shared vocabularies in collaborative tagging systems], ACM Transactions on the Web (TWEB), Vol
https://store.theartofservice.com/the-folksonomy-toolkit.html
SKOS - Formal release (2009)
1 On August 18, 2009, W3C released the new standard that builds a bridge
between the world of knowledge organization systems - including thesauri, classifications, subject
headings, taxonomies, and folksonomy|folksonomies - and the linked data community, bringing
benefits to both
https://store.theartofservice.com/the-folksonomy-toolkit.html
Weak ontology
1 On the World Wide Web, folksonomy in the form of tag cloud|tag schemas and typed
links has tended to evolve slowly in a variety of forums, and then be standardized in such schemes as microformats as more
and more forums agree. These weak ontology constructs only become strong in response to growing demands for a more
powerful form of search engine than is possible with Index term|keywording.
https://store.theartofservice.com/the-folksonomy-toolkit.html
CiteULike
1 Users can organize their libraries with freely chosen Tag (metadata)|
tags and this produces a folksonomy of academic interests.CiteULike: A Researcher's Social Bookmarking
Service, [http://www.ariadne.ac.uk/issue51/emamy-cameron/ Ariadne: Issue 51]
https://store.theartofservice.com/the-folksonomy-toolkit.html
Models of collaborative tagging - Complex systems dynamics and emergent vocabularies
1 Once such stable distributions form, examining the correlations between different tags can be used to construct simple folksonomy graphs,
which can be efficiently partitioned to obtain a form of community or shared
vocabularies.Valentin Robu, Harry Halpin, Hana Shepherd [http://portal.acm.org/citation.cfm?
id=1594173.1594176 Emergence of consensus and shared vocabularies in collaborative tagging systems], ACM Transactions on the Web (TWEB), Vol
https://store.theartofservice.com/the-folksonomy-toolkit.html
Connotea
1 Allowing completely free tagging means a folksonomy can gradually develop
https://store.theartofservice.com/the-folksonomy-toolkit.html
Furl - Features
1 Users could see lists of other users who have furled a URL, and read
their comments (if made public) to find users who share interests,
supporting folksonomy
https://store.theartofservice.com/the-folksonomy-toolkit.html
Breakbeat - Etymology
1 Whether this was part of the original meaning of the word or is purely a
folksonomy remains unclear, but it is safe to say that the term has evolved
to encompass both sentiments.
https://store.theartofservice.com/the-folksonomy-toolkit.html
Cinema of New Zealand - The Coming of Age of The New Zealand Short Film
1 The result saw an explosion of visually rich and compelling works that seemed to aspire more to the best of European cinema than the
mainstay of Hollywood fare ([http://folksonomy.co/?
permalink=174 Paul Shannon, 1995]).
https://store.theartofservice.com/the-folksonomy-toolkit.html
Cinema of New Zealand - The Coming of Age of The New Zealand Short Film
1 A Little Death: A Modern Day Fairytale|A Little Death
([http://folksonomy.co/?member=2 Simon Perkins], Paul Swadel, 1994),
11 minutes, 16mm, colour b/w;
https://store.theartofservice.com/the-folksonomy-toolkit.html
Cinema of New Zealand - The Coming of Age of The New Zealand Short Film
1 Eau de la vie ([http://www.nzfilm.co.nz/film_catalogue/short_fi
lms/short_film_catalogue/Eau_de_la_Vie_181.aspx Simon Baré], 1993), 13
Min, colour; and notably O Tamaiti (The Children) (Sima Urale, 1996) which won the Silver Lion Best Short Film at the Venice Film
Festival; and Two Cars, One Night (Taika Waititi) which was nominated Best Short Film at the
Academy Awards. Watch the [http://folksonomy.co/?keyword=18364 collected
set of short films] online.
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