Remove Knowledge Remove Listserv Remove Profile Remove Search
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Nonprofit Blogging and Social Networking Policies: Examples?

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

Now, I swear I remember seeing something from Easter Seals or another nonprofit on a listserv that mentioned either social networking policy or blogging policy. t have naughty gifts on your Facebook profile if your ???friends??? Share your knowledge, your passions and your personality in your posts by writing about what you know.

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ExhibitFiles: Interviews with Initiators Jim Spadaccini and Wendy Pollock

Museum 2.0

The artifacts are reaccessioned, the labels (hopefully) recycled, but what happens to the knowledge? NSF requires grant applicants to build on prior knowledge--where do you get it? The profiles were the last thing added, when we were getting into the nature of the site itself. What happens to an exhibit when it closes?

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Wikis: What, When, Why

Museum 2.0

While there are some criticisms of its consensus-based model for information-vetting, there's no doubt of its success as a collaborative knowledge-creation project. Wikis don't explicitly acknowledge individuals with "profile power"--content is prioritized, not identity. There's one primary way to navigate to pages: the search bar.

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