"controlled vocabularies often miss out on input from content authors and become rigid (...); folksonomies will begin to break down for the reasons mentioned above. Treating them as major parts of a single metada ecology might expose a useful symbiosis"
"In folksonomies (...) we get to discover content based on who is tagging it. This is powerful because now we can judge content in terms of who (...), and not just how relevant it might be to some algorithm that doesn’t take into account who-knows-who."
"If I get my friends to use Flickr, it gets better for me and for them. (...) Latest things matter. There are lots of interesting slices that can be taken. Slice by user, time, tags, location, relationship to other tags, "interestingness"."
B. Krause, A. Hotho, and G. Stumme. Advances in Information Retrieval, 30th European Conference on IR Research, ECIR 2008, volume 4956 of LNAI, page 101-113. Heidelberg, Springer, (2008)
G. Stumme. Proc. 3rd Intl. Conf. on Formal Concept Analysis, volume 3403 of Lecture Notes in Computer Science, page 315-328. Heidelberg, Springer, (2005)
G. Stumme. Proc. 3rd Intl. Conf. on Formal Concept Analysis, volume 3403 of Lecture Notes in Computer Science, page 315-328. Heidelberg, Springer, (2005)
K. Dellschaft, and S. Staab. HT '08: Proceedings of the nineteenth ACM conference on Hypertext and hypermedia, page 71--80. New York, NY, USA, ACM, (2008)