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<title>ASIST Bulletin_OctNov07</title>
<description>From Catalogablog:&lt;p&gt;&amp;quot;The October/November 2007 issue of the Bulletin of the American Society for Information Science and Technology includes a special section on Folksonomies.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;    * Introduction: Folksonomies and Image Tagging: Seeing the Future? by Diane Neal, Guest Editor&lt;br /&gt;    * Why Are They Tagging, and Why Do We Want Them To? by P. Jason Morrison&lt;br /&gt;    * Trouble in Paradise: Conflict Management and Resolution in Social Classification Environments by Chris Landbeck&lt;br /&gt;    * Image Indexing: How Can I Find a Nice Pair of Italian Shoes? by Elaine M&amp;eacute;nard&lt;br /&gt;    * Flickr Image Tagging: Patterns Made Visible by Joan Beaudoin&amp;quot;&lt;/p&gt;</description>
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<title>The Hive Mind: Folksonomies and User-Based Tagging</title>
<description>Overview of tagging</description>
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<title>Social Tagging &amp; Libraries</title>
<description>A bibliography for the Feb. 2008 South Eastern Pennsylvania Theological Library Association (SEPTLA) workshop</description>
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<title>ASIST October-November Bulletin</title>
<description>Special section with focus on folksonomies and tagging.</description>
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<title>Taxonomies and Trees</title>
<description>Interesting read &lt;br /&gt;</description>
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<title>Ontology of Folksonomy</title>
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<title>Folksonomies: Tidying up Tags?</title>
<description>&lt;p&gt;Argues for the usefulness of collaborative tagging, and highlights the known problems with free tagging. Points to some obvious, and some more controversial ways of limiting problems of inter-tagger inconsistency and meaningless distinctions. &lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;In this article we look at what makes folksonomies work. We agree with the premise that tags are no replacement for formal systems, but we see this as being the core quality that makes folksonomy tagging so useful. We begin by looking at the issue of &amp;quot;sloppy tags&amp;quot;, a problem to which critics of folksonomies are keen to allude, and ask if there are ways the folksonomy community could offset such problems and create systems that are conducive to searching, sorting and classifying. We then go on to question this &amp;quot;tidying up&amp;quot; approach and its underlying assumptions, highlighting issues surrounding removal of low-quality, redundant or nonsense metadata, and the potential risks of tidying too neatly and thereby losing the very openness that has made folksonomies so popular.&lt;/p&gt;</description>
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<item><guid isPermaLink="true">http://tags.library.upenn.edu/makerecord/url/129</guid>
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<title>The Structure of Collaborative Tagging Systems</title>
<description>&lt;p&gt;Shows the practices of taggers and tags. &lt;br /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;Collaborative tagging describes the process by which many users add metadata in the form of keywords to shared content. Recently, collaborative tagging has grown in popularity on the web, on sites that allow users to tag bookmarks, photographs and other content. In this paper we analyze the structure of collaborative tagging systems as well as their dynamical aspects. Specifically, we discovered regularities in user activity, tag frequencies, kinds of tags used, bursts of popularity in bookmarking and a remarkable stability in the relative proportions of tags within a given url. We also present a dynamical model of collaborative tagging that predicts these stable patterns and relates them to imitation and shared knowledge.&lt;/p&gt;</description>
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<item><guid isPermaLink="true">http://tags.library.upenn.edu/makerecord/url/389</guid>
<link>http://tags.library.upenn.edu/makerecord/url/389</link>
<title>Shirky: Ontology is Overrated -- Categories, Links, and Tags</title>
<description>&lt;p&gt;Looks at the development of various classification systems leading up to tagging, or user created metadata. Argues that tagging more closely mirrors the nature of web information.  &lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;Argues that ontologies are a bad ideal for organizing the world online. Points out that library classification systems are designed to optimize space on the shelves, not to describe the essences of identities. Also, that library classification systems are fundamentally about organizing books, not about organizing the enormity of human knowledge. The same flaws exists in a hierarchical file system. That it is designed with the assumption that a thing can only be in one place at one time -- it makes some attempt to have the organizional structure of ideas match the physical world, where in fact a pointer, or an idea, or a metaphorical path can be in countless places at the same time, and can have many equally important and useful relationships which describe it.  &lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;That ontologies are useful where there are expert users, clear categories and a limited domain. But, much less useful for non-expert users or large domains, and fuzzy categories. Links are the universal pointers on the web, and the addition of tags is simple, and provides a much more useful finding system than an ontology. With a system like delicious, you get to know who's doing the tagging, not just what the tags are, so you get to limit searches by people and time, limiting the size of your group [penntags tie-in].&lt;br /&gt;&lt;/p&gt;</description>
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<title>Folksonomies: power to the people</title>
<description>Very clear pros and cons of folksonomies versus more traditional classification systems. Looks at when and for what each kind of classification is most useful.  &lt;br /&gt;</description>
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<title>InfoTangle :: The Hive Mind: Folksonomies and User-Based Tagging :: December :: 2005</title>
<description>A Columbia Librarian posted a long article about tagging systems and their use in libraries. Interesting reading.&lt;br /&gt;</description>
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<link>http://tags.library.upenn.edu/makerecord/url/393</link>
<title>Taxonomies and Tags: From Trees to Piles of Leaves</title>
<description>A beautiful brief essay about tags.&lt;br /&gt;</description>
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<link>http://tags.library.upenn.edu/makerecord/url/7771</link>
<title>Tagging | TechEssence.Info</title>
<description>Nice summary of tagging.&amp;nbsp; Include bibliography&lt;br /&gt;</description>
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<item><guid isPermaLink="true">http://tags.library.upenn.edu/makerecord/url/5876</guid>
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<title>Taxonomies and Tags: From Trees to Piles of Leaves</title>
<description>A beautiful brief essay about tags.&lt;br /&gt;</description>
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<link>http://tags.library.upenn.edu/makerecord/url/394</link>
<title>David Weinberger dinner speech</title>
<description>&lt;p&gt;My favorite article. I wish I could force you to read this article. please...&lt;br /&gt;  &lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;&amp;quot;And you would never ever get this organization of knowledge right. Its not a solvable problem. It cant be done. Theres not a right way of doing it because there&amp;rsquo;s no single way of organizing this stuff. Taxonomies are not reflections of nature, they&amp;rsquo;re tools. And tools depend on what you want to do. It depends on your context. So along comes tagging.&amp;quot;&lt;/p&gt;</description>
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<title>Getting My Bearings: The best of del.icio.us</title>
<description>A blog post looking at the ways people use delicious and highlighting that just as much of the stuff on delicious is junk as the reset of web. &lt;br /&gt;</description>
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<title> The Hive Mind: Folksonomies and User-Based Tagging</title>
<description>Nice overview.&lt;br /&gt;</description>
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<link>http://tags.library.upenn.edu/makerecord/url/2015</link>
<title>Web as it was meant to be</title>
<description/></item>
<item><guid isPermaLink="true">http://tags.library.upenn.edu/makerecord/url/1983</guid>
<link>http://tags.library.upenn.edu/makerecord/url/1983</link>
<title>Taxonomies and Tags: From Trees to Piles of Leaves</title>
<description>A beautiful brief essay about tags.&lt;br /&gt;</description>
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<link>http://tags.library.upenn.edu/makerecord/url/754</link>
<title>http://shadows.com/</title>
<description>&lt;p&gt;This is linked from inside Pluck, which I was using to see how it's working these days.&amp;nbsp;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;Shadows is a social bookmarking service for discovering, sharing and managing information on the web. Shadows supercharges this information with a &amp;quot;Shadow Page&amp;quot; &amp;mdash; a community blog for any web page that includes views, ratings, tags, and comments by you, your friends and the Shadows community.&lt;/p&gt;</description>
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<title>Grassroots Cooperative Categorization Of Digital Content Assets: Folksonomies, What They Are, Why They Work - Robin Good' Sharewood Tidings</title>
<description>Another one of those articles that describes the whens and why's of traditionaly classification schemes versus folksonomies and tagging systems.&lt;br /&gt;</description>
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<link>http://tags.library.upenn.edu/makerecord/url/391</link>
<title>Salon.com Technology | Steal this bookmark!</title>
<description>A more popular introduction to tagging from Salon. If you're not a member of Salon.com, prepare to watch a loong ad. Wouldn't it be cool if the library could get a library subscription to Salon?&lt;br /&gt;</description>
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<link>http://tags.library.upenn.edu/makerecord/url/390</link>
<title>Social Bookmarking Tools (I): A General Review</title>
<description>From April 2005 issue of D-Lib Magazine, this artilce gives an overview of social bookmarking tools. &lt;br /&gt;</description>
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<title>Wired News: Folksonomies Tap People Power</title>
<description>A relatively short article on tagging systems, and their popularity.&lt;br /&gt;</description>
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<link>http://tags.library.upenn.edu/makerecord/url/384</link>
<title>Catalog your books with LibraryThing</title>
<description>Web application LibraryThing lets you catalog all the books you own and use tags to organize your collection.&lt;br /&gt; Add book titles by entering a title and viewing search results from the Library of Congress or Amazon. LibraryThing adds the book&amp;rsquo;s card to your catalog with ISBN, publisher, year and an image of the book cover. You have space to add a book summary, tags, your comments and a review. See what other users also have each book in their library and what they&amp;rsquo;ve tagged it. LibraryThing is an impressive cataloging app that feels like del.icio.us for books.</description>
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