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Digg: A news aggregator with an editorially driven front page. Diigo: Designed to bookmark web pages and highlight key points for reference. Has both a free version and a premium version. Hatena: Hatena Bookmark is a social bookmarking service by a Japanese company. It is often colloquially referred to as Hatebu. Pearltrees
Digg Social Reader is introduced. March 6, 2012: Digg Mobile is now in a relationship with Digg Social Reader. July 12, 2012: Digg announced its sale to Betaworks for $500,000. [75] July 20, 2012: Digg announces new site redesign in progress, "rebooting" the site back to v1 as a "startup", slated for release on August 1, 2012. [31] [33] [32 ...
Social bookmarking is an online service which allows users to add, annotate, edit, and share bookmarks of web documents. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] Many online bookmark management services have launched since 1996; Delicious , founded in 2003, popularized the terms "social bookmarking" and " tagging ".
Digg's online icon. Digg, started in December 2004, introduced the voting system. This system allows users to "digg" or "bury" articles. "Digging" is the equivalent of voting positively, so that popular articles are displayed first. "Burying" does not lower an article's score.
Social networking sites (ex: Digg, Reddit, Propeller, etc.) run on a virtuous cycle of content (stories, pictures, videos) attracting users who interact with the content (voting, commenting) and who are then inspired to provide new content (original or culled from outside sources), thereby attracting more readers, etc., etc. (see Web 2.0)
Yahoo! Buzz was a community-based news article website, heavily derived from Digg, that combined the features of social bookmarking and syndication through a user interface that allowed editorial control.
Social information processing is "an activity through which collective human actions organize knowledge." [1] It is the creation and processing of information by a group of people. As an academic field Social Information Processing studies the information processing power of networked social systems. Typically computer tools are used such as:
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