@inproceedings{IPLuxGranitzerKern2007BroadFolksonomies, title = {Aspects of Broad Folksonomies}, author = {M. Lux and M. Granitzer and R. Kern}, booktitle = {Proc. 18th International Conference on Database and Expert Systems Applications DEXA '07}, pages = {283--287}, year = 2007, timestamp = {2008.07.06}, issn = {1529-4188}, owner = {mgrani}, doi = {10.1109/DEXA.2007.80}, description = {myown conferences}, biburl = {http://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2e4390d936ac18658ff2d1bf1c98ccf9a/mgrani}, keywords = {data, information analysis, folksonomy, Wide broad retrieval, keyword Internet, property myown assignment, meta statistical groupware, Web, metadata, folksonomy World conference based} } @article{keyhere, title = {Tagging and searching: Search retrieval effectiveness of folksonomies on the World Wide Web}, author = {P. Jason Morrison}, journal = {Information Processing & Management}, month = {#jul#}, note = {folksonomy research}, number = 4, pages = {1562--1579}, volume = 44, year = 2008, url = {http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/B6VC8-4S035FV-1/2/88dd3b7722dc8ec29277b98aaacee59c}, description = {ScienceDirect - Information Processing & Management : Tagging and searching: Search retrieval effectiveness of folksonomies on the World Wide Web}, abstract = {Many Web sites have begun allowing users to submit items to a collection and tag them with keywords. The folksonomies built from these tags are an interesting topic that has seen little empirical research. This study compared the search information retrieval (IR) performance of folksonomies from social bookmarking Web sites against search engines and subject directories. Thirty-four participants created 103 queries for various information needs. Results from each IR system were collected and participants judged relevance. Folksonomy search results overlapped with those from the other systems, and documents found by both search engines and folksonomies were significantly more likely to be judged relevant than those returned by any single IR system type. The search engines in the study had the highest precision and recall, but the folksonomies fared surprisingly well. Del.icio.us was statistically indistinguishable from the directories in many cases. Overall the directories were more precise than the folksonomies but they had similar recall scores. Better query handling may enhance folksonomy IR performance further. The folksonomies studied were promising, and may be able to improve Web search performance.}, biburl = {http://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2041a40db631707cb15bd17e36a77bd87/iamjason}, keywords = {Search bookmarking google Wide tagging IR retrieval Social Folksonomy Information Web web2.0 World internet} } @book{AlbyWeb2007, title = {Web 2.0}, address = {M{\"u}nchen}, author = {Tom Alby}, edition = {2., aktualisierte Aufl.}, publisher = {Hanser}, year = 2007, isbn = {3-446-41208-5}, description = {KUG Recherche-Portal}, biburl = {http://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2d1766dc35793bbcfa03dba39920ae24e/sonni}, keywords = {Wide Web World 2.0} } @book{EberSoci2008, title = {Social Web}, address = {Konstanz}, author = {Anja Ebersbach and Markus Glaser and Richard Heigl}, publisher = {UVK Verl.-Ges. [u.a.]}, year = 2008, isbn = {978-3-8252-3065-4}, description = {KUG Recherche-Portal}, biburl = {http://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2d83f8a35cb3b39c8b20b30929436bc61/ishmael1851}, keywords = {Web2.0 Wide Web Soziales Netzwerk Selbstorganisation Onlinegemeinde World} } @article{Walker:2001:PC, title = {Search engine case study: searching the web using genetic programming and {MPI}}, author = {Reginald L. Walker}, journal = {Parallel Computing}, month = {January}, number = {1-2}, pages = {71--89}, volume = 27, year = 2001, url = {http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/B6V12-42K5HNX-4/1/57eb870c72fb7768bb7d824557444b72}, abstract = {The generation of a Web page follows distinct sources for the incorporation of information. The earliest format of these sources was an organized display of known information determined by the page designers' interest and/or design parameters. The sources may have been published in books or other printed literature, or disseminated as general information about the page designer. Due to a growth in Web pages, several new search engines have been developed in addition to the refinement of the already existing ones. The use of the refined search engines, however, still produces an array of diverse information when the same set of keywords are used in a Web search. Some degree of consistency in the search results can be achieved over a period of time when the same search engine is used, yet, most initial Web searches on a given topic are treated as final after some form of refinement/adjustment of the keywords used in the search process. To determine the applicability of a genetic programming (GP) model for the diverse set of Web documents, search strategies behind the current search engines for the World Wide Web were studied. The development of a GP model resulted in a parallel implementation of a pseudo-search engine indexer simulator. The training sets used in this study provided a small snapshot of the computational effort required to index Web documents accurately and efficiently. Future results will be used to develop and implement Web crawler mechanisms that are capable of assessing the scope of this research effort. The GP model results were generated on a network of SUN workstations and an IBM SP2.}, biburl = {http://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2aa91084b0a9ea846c996e2701ecbe5d2/brazovayeye}, keywords = {Information computing, Search programming, Distributed Wide retrieval, genetic Web, engines algorithms, World} } @inproceedings{walker:1999:AWGP, title = {Assessment of the Web using Genetic Programming}, address = {Orlando, Florida, USA}, author = {Reginald L. Walker}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Genetic and Evolutionary Computation Conference}, editor = {Wolfgang Banzhaf and Jason Daida and Agoston E. Eiben and Max H. Garzon and Vasant Honavar and Mark Jakiela and Robert E. Smith}, month = {13-17 July}, pages = {1750--1755}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, volume = 2, year = 1999, url = {http://www.cs.bham.ac.uk/~wbl/biblio/gecco1999/RW-727.ps}, address = {San Francisco, CA 94104, USA}, isbn = {1-55860-611-4}, biburl = {http://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/21e58f3c9767513abd316731384afb90b/brazovayeye}, keywords = {information retrieval, engines wide internet, real programming, search genetic web, algorithms, world applications,} } @article{Lawrence01, title = {Free online availability substantially increases a paper's impact}, author = {Steve Lawrence}, journal = {Nature}, month = {31 May}, number = 6837, pages = 521, volume = 411, year = 2001, url = {http://citeseer.ist.psu.edu/online-nature01/}, doi = {doi:10.1038/35079151}, size = {1 page}, abstract = {...analyzed 119,924 conference articles in computer science and related disciplines, obtained from DBLP (dblp.uni-trier.de). In computer science, conference articles are typically formal publications and are often more prestigious than journal articles, with acceptance rates at some conferences below 10\%. Citation counts and online availability were estimated using ResearchIndex....}, biburl = {http://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/20373022e77758ef496641301284a3c05/brazovayeye}, keywords = {papers, www, c200x, citeseer, c2001, jrnl, cited, wide publications, c20xx impact factor, online, web, world citations,} } @inproceedings{chong:1999:jDGPi, title = {Java based Distributed Genetic Programming on the Internet}, address = {Orlando, Florida, USA}, author = {Fuey Sian Chong and W. B. Langdon}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Genetic and Evolutionary Computation Conference}, editor = {Wolfgang Banzhaf and Jason Daida and Agoston E. Eiben and Max H. Garzon and Vasant Honavar and Mark Jakiela and Robert E. Smith}, month = {13-17 July}, note = {Full text in technical report CSRP-99-7}, pages = 1229, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, volume = 2, year = 1999, url = {http://www.cs.bham.ac.uk/~wbl/ftp/papers/p.chong/DGPposter.ps.gz}, address = {San Francisco, CA 94104, USA}, isbn = {1-55860-611-4}, notes = {GECCO-99, part of \cite{banzhaf:1999:gecco99}, size = {1 page}, abstract = {A distributed approach for parallelising Genetic Programming (GP) on the Internet is proposed and its feasibility demonstrated with a distributed GP system termed DGP developed in Java. DGP is run successfully across the world over the Internet on heterogeneous platforms without any central co-ordination. The run results and the outcome of an experiment to determine DGP's performance are reported together with a description of DGP.}, biburl = {http://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2f18ab88fdd346fd3544498358e0ef5ca/brazovayeye}, keywords = {Wide Applet Internet, / Computing, Java programming, Distributed Servlets, genetic poster World algorithms, Application, DGP,} } @article{Kha_Rif_1997, title = {Weaving a Web of Trust}, author = {Rohit Khare and Adam Rifkin}, journal = {World Wide Web Journal}, number = 3, pages = {77--112}, volume = 2, year = 1997, abstract = {To date, "World Wide Web Security" has been publicly associated with debates over cryptographic technology, protocols, and public policy. This narrow focus can obscure the wider challenge of building trusted Web applications. Since the Web aims to be an information space that reflects not just human knowledge but also human relationships, it will soon reflect the full complexity of trust relationships among people, computers, and organizations. Within the computer security community, Trust Management has emerged as a new philosophy for protecting open, decentralized systems, in contrast to traditional tools for securing closed systems. Trust Management is an essential approach, because the Web crosses many trust boundaries that old-school computer security cannot even begin to handle. In this paper, we consider how this philosophy could be applied to the Web. We introduce the fundamental principles, principals, and policies of Trust Management, as well as Web-specific pragmatic issues. In so doing, we develop a taxonomy for how trust assertions can be specified, justified, and validated. We demonstrate the value of this framework by considering the trust questions faced by the designers of applications for secure document distribution, content filtering, electronic commerce, and downloadable-code systems. We conclude by sketching the limits to automatable Trust Management, demonstrating how trust on the Web will adapt to the trust rules of human communities and vice versa.}, biburl = {http://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/23923a8eb29a357f9e75f52b029dd0dd6/dawinci}, keywords = {trust web wide management world} } @article{3165891120080403, title = {Wikis That Mean Business.}, author = {Ron Roszkiewicz}, journal = {Seybold Report: Analyzing Publishing Technologies}, number = 7, pages = {p8 - 14}, volume = 8, year = 20080403, url = {http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=bth&AN=31658911&site=ehost-live}, issn = {15339211}, abstract = {The article focuses on the application of Socialtext and its Wiki technology. It relates that Wiki is the social networking technology linked to Web 2.0, and that it has the potential of transforming traditional publishing. It mentions that a Wiki is an open editing environment and a digital asset management (DAM) system for ideas. It also states that Socialtext, as a development platform with all of the tools and support to build online collaborative application, has the technology and support to develop Wiki technology into applications that is acceptable for any horizontal or vertical requirement. }, biburl = {http://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/21d18ff3f243ea92728b81e8d974285fb/ko160207}, keywords = {resources ELECTRONIC SOCIAL Wide WORLD sites, ONLINE WIKIS WEB networks, publishing, network 2.0, science), COMPUTER social Web, (Computer} } @article{Giancola2006, title = {A novel approach for estimating multi-user interference in impulse radio UWB networks: The pulse collision model}, author = {Guerino Giancola and Maria-Gabriella Di Benedetto}, journal = {Signal Processing}, month = {Sep}, number = 9, pages = {2185--2197}, volume = 86, year = 2006, url = {http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/B6V18-4J85PJ1-2/1/290d102d3e21aaccdadb21e9f65550c7}, biburl = {http://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/23f32eb0be2d7812ef2820dfd5a43397d/smicha}, keywords = {Wide Ultra Band} } @article{He2002, title = {Web document clustering using hyperlink structures}, author = {Xiaofeng He and Hongyuan Zha and Chris H. Q. Ding and Horst D. Simon}, journal = {Computational Statistics \& Data Analysis}, month = {Nov}, number = 1, pages = {19--45}, volume = 41, year = 2002, day = 28, url = {http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/B6V8V-45F8YNF-9/1/1509ca5d1a1f52b9419efc3d81190d11}, biburl = {http://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/29c1403f941be974e7889dc64814e0c96/smicha}, keywords = {Wide Web World} } @article{Sol_2007b, title = {'I've Got Nothing to Hide' and Other Misunderstandings of Privacy}, author = {Daniel J. Solove}, journal = {San Diego Law Review}, pages = {745 pp.}, volume = 44, year = 2007, url = {http://ssrn.com/paper=998565}, biburl = {http://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2ecf194247babbdde92b9c492fe5a9a73/dawinci}, keywords = {protection identity privacy web wide world} } @misc{MaySch_2007, title = {Useful Void: The Art of Forgetting in the Age of Ubiquitous Computing}, author = {Viktor Mayer-Schönberger}, institution = {Harvard University}, month = {April}, number = {RWP07-022}, school = {John F. Kennedy School of Government}, series = {Research Working Papers}, year = 2007, url = {http://ksgnotes1.harvard.edu/Research/wpaper.nsf/rwp/RWP07-022/$File/rwp_07_022_mayer-schoenberger.pdf}, abstract = {As humans we have the capacity to remember – and to forget. For millennia remembering was hard, and forgetting easy. By default, we would forget. Digital technology has inverted this. Today, with affordable storage, effortless retrieval and global access remembering has become the default, for us individually and for society as a whole. We store our digital photos irrespective of whether they are good or not - because even choosing which to throw away is too time-consuming, and keep different versions of the documents we work on, just in case we ever need to go back to an earlier one. Google saves every search query, and millions of video surveillance cameras retain our movements. In this article I analyze this shift and link it to technological innovation and information economics. Then I suggest why we may want to worry about the shift, and call for what I term data ecology. In contrast to others I do not call for comprehensive new laws or constitutional adjudication. Instead I propose a simple rule that reinstates the default of forgetting our societies have experienced for millennia, and I show how a combination of law and technology can achieve this shift.}, biburl = {http://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2311ee303046ec65b6bcb503486499bc8/dawinci}, keywords = {google privacy data web wide world forgetting} } @article{Fensel.2001, title = {OIL: an Ontology Infrastructure for the Semantic Web}, author = {Dieter Fensel and F. Van Harmelen and Ian Horrocks and Deborah L. McGuinness and P. F. Patel-Schneider}, journal = {Intelligent Systems}, number = 2, pages = {38-45}, volume = 16, year = 2001, abstract = {Researchers in artificial intelligence first developed ontologies to facilitate knowledge sharing and reuse. Ontologies play a major role in supporting information exchange across various networks. A prerequisite for such a role is the development of a joint standard for specifying and exchanging ontologies. The authors present OIL, a proposal for such a standard. Ontologies applied to the World Wide Web are creating the Semantic Web.}, biburl = {http://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/29d2beb6a03fdf25e47f9f0030af8824e/callagialla}, keywords = {resourcesknowledge webWorld exchangeknowledge Wide engineeringOIL Webinformation intelligenceINFORMATION infrastructurestandard infrastructuresemantic InternetArtificial sharingontology} } @book{BernersLee.1999, title = {Weaving the Web: The Original Design and Ultimate Destiny of the World Wide Web by its Inventor}, address = {New York}, author = {Tim Berners-Lee and Mark Fischetti}, publisher = {Harper Collins Publishers}, year = 1999, isbn = {0062515861}, biburl = {http://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/22a68662ccd7847aa15b39219088b372d/callagialla}, keywords = {Wide WebHistory.Berners-Lee, World Tim.} } @book{Gundavaram1996, title = {CGI Programming on the World Wide Web WWW : [examples in Perl]}, address = {Bonn [u.a.]}, author = {Shishir Gundavaram}, edition = {1. ed.}, publisher = {O'Reilly}, year = 1996, isbn = {1-56592-168-2}, biburl = {http://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/273d90c8308b30a6f12117834f49caf6a/schoel}, keywords = {Programmiersprache Datenverarbeitung gateway Wide Web Grafische CGI World Programmierung «Common interface»} } @article{noruzi_web_2006, title = {The web impact factor: a critical review}, author = {Alireza Noruzi}, journal = {Electronic Library}, pages = {490-500}, volume = 24, year = 2006, url = {http://www.emeraldinsight.com }, abstract = {Purpose: The purpose of this article is to analyze the link-based web site impact measure known as the web impact factor (WIF). It is a quantitative tool for evaluating and ranking web sites, top-level domains and sub-domains. The paper also aims to discuss the WIF's advantages and disadvantages, data collection problems, and validity and reliability of WIF results. Design/methodology/approach: A key to webometric studies has been the use of large-scale search engines, such as Yahoo! and AltaVista that allow measurements to be made of the total number of pages in a web site and the total number of back-links to the web site. These search engines provide similar possibilities for the investigation of links between web sites/pages to those provided by the academic journals citation databases from the Institute of Scientific Information (ISI). But the content of the web is not of the same nature and quality as the databases maintained by the ISI. Findings: This paper reviews how the WIF has been developed and applied. It has been suggested that web impact factors can be calculated as a way of comparing the attractiveness of web sites or domains on the web. It is concluded that, while the WIF is arguably useful for quantitative intra-country comparison, application beyond this (i.e. to inter-country assessment) has little value. Originality/value: The paper offers a critical review of literature on the WIF and associated indicators. (Author abstract)}, biburl = {http://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/20d7fe0bac95894ed5beb6341be5426c8/sercarfe}, keywords = {sites,World Wide Web measures,Web factors,Links,Performance analysis,Evaluation,Impact Citation} } @article{li_relationship_2003, title = {The relationship between the WIFs or inlinks of Computer Science Departments in UK and their RAE ratings or research productivities in 200}, author = {Xuemei Li and Peter Musgrove and Mike Thelwall and David Wilkinson}, journal = {Scientometrics}, month = {June}, pages = {239-255}, volume = 57, year = 2003, abstract = {Previous research has shown, that Web link based metrics can correlate with traditional research assessment at the university level. In this study, we test whether the same is true for the computer science departments in the UK. The relevant Web Impact Factors (WIFs) were calculated from the link data collected both from AltaVista and the special academic crawler of the University of Wolverhampton. The numbers of staff members and Web pages in each computer science department were used as denominators for the WIFs calculation. The number of inlinks to the computer science departments correlated significantly with their research productivities, and WIFs with numbers of staff members as denominators correlated significantly with their Research Assessment Exercise (RAE) ratings. The number of staff members was confirmed to be a better indicator of departmental size than the number of Web pages within the department's domain. (Original abstract)}, biburl = {http://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2fc099c81679b8c84b765a54c01066ae5/sercarfe}, keywords = {sites,World Wide Web factors,Internet,Links,Web analysis,Impact Citation} } @article{brody_earlier_2006, title = {Earlier web usage statistics as predictors of later citation impact}, author = {Tim Brody and Stevan Harnad and Leslie Carr}, journal = {Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology}, month = {June}, pages = {1060-1072}, volume = 57, year = 2006, url = {http://www.interscience.wiley.com }, abstract = {The use of citation counts to assess the impact of research articles is well established. However, the citation impact of an article can only be measured several years after it has been published. As research articles are increasingly accessed through the Web, the number of times an article is downloaded can be instantly recorded and counted. One would expect the number of times an article is read to be related both to the number of times it is cited and to how old the article is. The authors analyze how short-term Web usage impact predicts medium-term citation impact. The physics e-print archive - arXiv.org - is used to test this. (Author abstract)}, biburl = {http://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/27383a2171434e959c5d0aa1f44204329/sercarfe}, keywords = {information Articles,Citation statistics,World Wide Web retrieval,Performance factors,Online measures,Periodicals,Searching,Use collection,Evaluation,Impact analysis,Data} }