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What is Collective Intelligence?CI means many things to many people. Here, it refers to the capacity of human communities to evolve towards higher order complexity and integration through collaboration and innovation. This blog wants to be an embodiment of what it is about. If you care, subscribe and contribute.
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February 10, 2005Steal this bookmark!?Thierry Nabeth of INSEAD has just alerted me of a new social networking phenomenon called "tagging". In his message there was a reference to a Salon.com article in which Howard Rheingold said about tagging: "It's like Friendster for knowledge as far as I'm concerned. I look to see who the other people are on del.icio.us who tag the same things that I think are important. Then, I can look and see what else they've tagged ... And isn't that part of the collective intelligence of the Web? You meet people who find things that you find interesting and useful -- and that multiplies your ability to find things that are interesting and useful, and other people feed off of you." I think using tags for growing collective intelligence requires more than a clever technology. Unless we think of CI in the statistical sense (as in The Wisdom of Crowds), it requires the art of integrating the triple network of People, Knowledge, and Technology. Tags (bookmarks referring to the same subjects) collected from millions of bloggers are not more useful than a Google search that turns up over a million pages in response to my query. When somebody comes up with a way to integrate tagging with my trusted circle of friends and colleagues, then CI got a potent new tool, indeed. Technically, it shouldn't be difficult and I'd be surprised if an innovative social network host would not be already working on it.
Posted by George Por, Thu, Feb 10 2005 12:00 PM
Comments (8) Categories: Technologies That Support CI | ________________________________________________________ Comments
I archive bookmarks via spurl.net and del.icio.us. When searching the web for very specific info, I always search through the spurl.net archives, (all user-spurled pages are cached), before I use google. The Spurl results are "pre-approved" (not the best word, pre-enjoyed maybe?) and lead to much higher quality results. Posted by: Wally Glutton at February 10, 2005 05:41 PMHi George. "Tag ... You're It!" That is the saying of the standard childs game. If we watch how children build their collective knowledge, intelligence, wisdom etc we'll see that the big people are trying to do the same without the childsplay. Trying to create a techincal substitute for basic social intercourse is a noble pursuit and worthy of lots of programming time. While doing that the CI people could take time out and a few moments doing the real thing over a coffee, tea or just a walk in the park and see what or whom tags them. As always your stuff is thought provoking. Regards PAD Posted by: pad at February 10, 2005 10:17 PMHi George. "Tag ... You're It!" That is the saying of the standard childs game. If we watch how children build their collective knowledge, intelligence, wisdom etc we'll see that the big people are trying to do the same without the childsplay. Trying to create a techincal substitute for basic social intercourse is a noble pursuit and worthy of lots of programming time. While doing that the CI people could take time out and a few moments doing the real thing over a coffee, tea or just a walk in the park and see what or whom tags them. As always your stuff is thought provoking. Regards PAD Posted by: pad at February 10, 2005 10:18 PMHi George, You say "...requires the art of integrating the triple network of People, Knowledge, and Technology. Tags (bookmarks referring to the same subjects) collected from millions of bloggers are not more useful than a Google search that turns up over a million pages in response to my query..." Del.icio.us does integrate p-k-t its the most basic interface/tool ive ever used.. but if you use it you will see that it does in fact combine those 3 elements veru effectively..Please play with Tags, I think you will agree they are already a really important tool for CI, and will become ever more so as things get built around them. I see them providing a kind of holopticism ... they let all individuals see the collective zeitgeist in play.. one which involves each and every ones own contributions. Google search is a view of the past.. Tag search is a view of the present and future, whats interesting right now.. a very different outcome from search.. not only that they are extremely social.. even more social than blogs.. blogs let you build a network with others blogging on shared interests over a period of time. Tags let you zoom in on a relevant group of peeople sharing your interest much much faster.. Dont forget rss is part of this.. you can serach any intersection of tags to keep you right on the pulse of your field of interest.. you can also subscribe to people and follow up what their interested in.. It really is as close to the pulse of the zeitgiest as you can get.. del.icio.us/tag/popular will give you a view of what is hot this very moment.. google gets a view over a far longer period going back.. and its dominated by pop cultre.. I guarantee that once you explore tags (essentially try them out a while) you will be convinced they are a critical new CI tool. In fact the applications are endless.. some want to replace trackbacks with tagbacks, some are using them to gather all their previously dispersed comments around the web and pull them via rss back into their weblogs. Im using tags as a poor mans meta data architecture (who needs expensive EIS anymore) for an exploration / pilot KM project.. rss/blogs/tags give me everything I need to build a fluid knowledge sharing community. if you want Im happy to explore further exactly how CI can best leverage CI.. I find this really exciting and believe we are fortunate to be at the beginning of something incredibly important.. All the best, Mark.. ps I'll hit my delicious popup bookmarklet and tag this page: "CI Collective Intelligence tags KM comments" note the last tag, comments, allows me to get this page pulled into my comments feed at a later date, along with everything else I've ever written .. In a way Im recovering the bits of me.... the trails in web space that were previousl disconnected and lost.. I can now bring them home :-) Posted by: mark ranford at February 12, 2005 06:05 AMOf note on the tagging front is a new community model called www.43things.com - here people post their goals and CREATE tags for them which other people can then use to discover similar goals. Posted by: Ed Daniel at March 2, 2005 11:09 AMEd, thanx 4 the link; I've just joined http://www.43things.com . May it go ALL the way of community self-organization towards higher order complexity! Posted by: George Por at March 2, 2005 12:31 PMAnd to add to all the other tag resources j http://www.aggregato.com is also well worth a look. Like delicious, but for RSS feeds. What I'd like to see is a plugin/extension that will crawl my bookmarks in delicious and automagically add their feeds to my aggregato account. Lots of very cool delicious plugins already exist. You'll find links to details in my delicious bookmarks on delicous: http://del.icio.us/qopi/delicious Posted by: Josef Davies-Coates at March 26, 2005 06:40 AMPost a comment
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