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Strengthen Your Community with a Knowledge Sharing Network

NTEN

Discussion boards can be added to your website, leveraged in a Ning site, or you can use a google group or similar solution. If users have to create an account, that in itself is a barrier, but it will allow you to delete accounts that spam. If you open up comments to all users, you are going to get spammers.

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Joshua Schachter: Future of Tagging

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

and yet as you say the tool is also for an individual to help remember where something is, as a business going forward how will you balance the individual versus the social/group? t feel there was necessarily tension between individual and the group. ???You For example, taxonomy. There 2-3 spam incidents a week.

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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

He covered the following platforms: Blogs: It is more than a web site, built by one person or a small community or group of bloggers. Talked about the problem of wiki spam and how easy it is to administrator. Described the difference between taxonomy and folksonomy. He selected some definitions from the Internet.

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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. I'm developing a model for taking the ideas in there to scale, in the form of online workshops and online support groups.