it almost seems like its own namespace-x-
On Tue, Nov 17, 2009 at 4:59 PM, Christian Crumlish <xi...@pobox.com> wrote:
it almost seems like its own namespace
-x-
p.s.: see also�http://developer.yahoo.com/ypatterns/social/people/reputation/
Well, I think what Monica is talking about are more like "stats" than reputation.
Not all services count such things, but many could provide an aggregate count as to the number of friends or contacts someone has, or the number of fans or followers they've accrued. Twitter, Facebook, or Amazon might also provide the number of lists they've made (for Amazon, it'd be wishlists), or other stats.
I wouldn't call this "reputation" because of the weight (and near impossibility) of the subject matter � especially when applying it to two disjoint social contexts.
I think this at least bears inspection as Twitter is providing this information. For now, I've created a page on the wiki to explore this topic further:
Chris
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On Tue, Nov 17, 2009 at 4:59 PM, Christian Crumlish <xi...@pobox.com> wrote:
it almost seems like its own namespace
-x-
Well, I think what Monica is talking about are more like "stats" than reputation.Not all services count such things, but many could provide an aggregate count as to the number of friends or contacts someone has, or the number of fans or followers they've accrued. Twitter, Facebook, or Amazon might also provide the number of lists they've made (for Amazon, it'd be wishlists), or other stats.
I wouldn't call this "reputation" because of the weight (and near impossibility) of the subject matter — especially when applying it to two disjoint social contexts.
I think this at least bears inspection as Twitter is providing this information. For now, I've created a page on the wiki to explore this topic further:Chris
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Chris Messina
Open Web Advocate
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Follow me on Twitter: http://twitter.com/chrismessina
Citizen Agency: http://citizenagency.com
Diso Project: http://diso-project.org
OpenID Foundation: http://openid.net
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It is important to share this information when we exchange user
generated content so the external parties have some idea on the value
of the content when surfaced to their users. Activities/Tweets are
fairly compact so there is not a lot to match on. Who the author is
adds value and how others respond to him/her definitely adds value. I
would love to get more feedback on what others think good metrics are
For now http://userlabor.org/ looks very aligned with what we want.
The only piece that I do not understand is network given that it seems
they do not account for bidirectional and unidirectional relationships
or how to calculate the values below for density, betweenness and
closeness... I am assuming its out of 1 ? Ha if the authors are on
this mailing list, let us know.
<network>
<item object="connection">269</item>
<item object="density">0.101</item>
<item object="betweenness">0.225</item>
<item object="closeness">0.700</item>
</network>
On a closely related note, many sites have asked us to add "sign up date" as well as other reputation attributes to our OpenID service, mostly for anti-abuse purposes. This would be a useful AX attribute, especially if OPs are willing to standardize on this.
Allen
Chris Messina wrote:
On Tue, Nov 17, 2009 at 4:59 PM, Christian Crumlish <xi...@pobox.com> wrote:
it almost seems like its own namespace
-x-
Well, I think what Monica is talking about are more like "stats" than reputation.
Not all services count such things, but many could provide an aggregate count as to the number of friends or contacts someone has, or the number of fans or followers they've accrued. Twitter, Facebook, or Amazon might also provide the number of lists they've made (for Amazon, it'd be wishlists), or other stats.
I wouldn't call this "reputation" because of the weight (and near impossibility) of the subject matter — especially when applying it to two disjoint social contexts.
I think this at least bears inspection as Twitter is providing this information. For now, I've created a page on the wiki to explore this topic further:
Chris
--
Chris Messina
Open Web Advocate
Personal: http://factoryjoe.com
Follow me on Twitter: http://twitter.com/chrismessina
Citizen Agency: http://citizenagency.com
Diso Project: http://diso-project.org
OpenID Foundation: http://openid.net
This email is: [ ] shareable [X] ask first [ ] private
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I looked at UserLabor a long time ago and had hopes that it could be the model for Activity Streams. Their model ended up being a bit too esoteric and original for my tastes, and hence our work was born.
APML also tried to provide a mechanism for weighting tags some time ago, but that's not quite what we want either.
I worry a little about reaching beyond the core of what Activity Streams were designed to do, but I understand Monica's desire to meet developer's thirst for more data about the actor.