Gruber said he saw four different ways of adding meta-tags to material, ranging from the loosest to the most strict:
1.Folksonomy (informal, user-defined)
2.Controlled vocabularies (the user must deploy a set of defined terms)
3.Taxonomy (Pre-defined terms in which specific terms are subsets of more general terms)
4.Ontology (A rich set of relationships is mapped out among all the terms)
M. Tedre, and J. Pajunen. Proceedings of the 13th Koli Calling International Conference on Computing Education Research, page 97--104. New York, NY, USA, ACM, (2013)
C. Tempich, H. Pinto, Y. Sure, and S. Staab. Second European Semantic Web Conference, ESWC 2005, volume 3532 of LNCS, page 241--256. Heraklion, Crete, Greece, Springer, (May 2005)
K. Sathiyamurthy, T. Geetha, and M. Senthilvelan. Proceedings of the International Conference on Advances in Computing, Communications and Informatics, page 1193--1198. New York, NY, USA, ACM, (2012)
P. Sancho, C. Juiz, R. Puigjaner, L. Chung, and N. Subramanian. WOSP '07: Proceedings of the 6th international workshop on Software and performance, page 125--128. New York, NY, USA, ACM Press, (2007)
R. Navigli, and P. Velardi. Proceedings of the 14th European Conference on Machine Learning, Workshop on Adaptive Text Extraction and Mining, Cavtat-Dubrovnik, Croatia, page 42--49. (2003)
K. Shchekotykhin, D. Jannach, G. Friedrich, and O. Kozeruk. Proceedings of the 6th International Semantic Web Conference and 2nd Asian Semantic Web Conference (ISWC/ASWC2007), Busan, South Korea, volume 4825 of LNCS, page 463--476. Berlin, Heidelberg, Springer Verlag, (November 2007)
E. Demidova, I. Oelze, and W. Nejdl. Proc. of the ACM International Conference on Information andKnowledge Management (CIKM 2013), San Francisco, Oct. 2013., (2013)