article thumbnail

Strengthen Your Community with a Knowledge Sharing Network

NTEN

The nonprofit technology community is a robust knowledge sharing network widely dispersed across many blogs, tweets, discussion boards, Facebook walls, etc. Discussion boards can be added to your website, leveraged in a Ning site, or you can use a google group or similar solution. Some are successful, but messy.

article thumbnail

Joshua Schachter: Future of Tagging

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

The first ten minutes were a discussion between Weinberger and Schachter and then the remaining 70 minutes was wide ranging discussion and q/a: Weinberger : ???There For example, taxonomy. His definition of tag spam: A bookmark with 1,000 different tags. There 2-3 spam incidents a week. t spam happen a lot more?

Tag 50
professionals

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

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

Talked about the problem of wiki spam and how easy it is to administrator. Described the difference between taxonomy and folksonomy. Discussed the differences in perspective between generations. He told the story of the founding of wikipedia and the meaning of the Hawaiin word - quickly, quickly. Conclusion.

Romania 50
article thumbnail

A Conversation with Michael Gilbert on Nonprofit Blogging

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

A message can derive from any of the following: an updated web site, a newsletter, a mailing list, an RSS item, a recommendation form, some personal email, newsgroups, and web based discussion groups. They are both spam magnets and I have enough trouble dealing with email spam as it is. Some result in followup news items.