Remove Content Remove Examples Remove Spam Remove Taxonomy
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Strengthen Your Community with a Knowledge Sharing Network

NTEN

Perhaps you already provide them with relevant content through a website, e-newsletter, e-mails, or social media channels. Such a place can also be a source of “user generated content”, relieving your internal staff from the burden of coming up with fresh content, and truly leveraging the ideas of your larger community.

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Live Blogging ONG Web 2.0 Conference in Romania sponsored by the Soros Foundation in Bucharest

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

Niche content. Talked about the problem of wiki spam and how easy it is to administrator. Described the features and content. Collective Tagging: Tagging is a keyword that describes the content. Gave examples of how to tag the presentation. Gave examples of how to tag the presentation. Conclusion.

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Joshua Schachter: Future of Tagging

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

For example, you as an individual find a page you want to remember. t describe the content. For example, taxonomy. His definition of tag spam: A bookmark with 1,000 different tags. There 2-3 spam incidents a week. The type of spam that is happening now is posting and deleting to stay on the front page.

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A Conversation with Michael Gilbert on Nonprofit Blogging

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

Michael shared some insights into his writing discipline and practice, content filtering approaches, and observations of blogging by and about nonprofits. I was already very interested in automation at this point and built a small content management system for the purpose of publishing those bits. Q: When did you start publishing?