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Powered by Humanity Issue1 #121206 "The semantics are in the user, not the system" Clay Shirky"Here is the damn information, you make the decision. You are the human. I'm just a machine." IBM System of systems | "Critically, the semantics here are in the users, not in the system." -quoting Shirky- "System" here means the technical one, but in effect we have always to do with a "sociotechnicallly looping system" with us minds as elements in the loop. Or in other words we are _deeply_ wired with our own artifacts. So any transformation is from the "inside", only apparently from the system-outside. (Willi Schroll -TNE conversation) Here expand and link to Maturana, the biology of knowledge. Explore further Shirky's Cognitive Surplus put to work. |
+Citations (3) - CitationsAdd new citationList by: CiterankMapLink[2] Ontology is Overrated: Categories, Links, and Tags
Author: Clay Shirky Cited by: Helene Finidori 10:25 AM 15 October 2011 GMT URL: | Excerpt / Summary Critically, the semantics here are in the users, not in the system. This is not a way to get computers to understand things. When del.icio.us is recommending tags to me, the system is not saying, "I know that OSX is an operating system. Therefore, I can use predicate logic to come up with recommendations -- users run software, software runs on operating systems, OSX is a type of operating system -- and then say 'Here Mr. User, you may like these links.'"
What it's doing instead is a lot simpler: "A lot of users tagging things foobar are also tagging them frobnitz. I'll tell the user foobar and frobnitz are related." It's up to the user to decide whether or not that recommendation is useful -- del.icio.us has no idea what the tags mean. The tag overlap is in the system, but the tag semantics are in the users. This is not a way to inject linguistic meaning into the machine.
It's all dependent on human context. This is what we're starting to see with del.icio.us, with Flickr, with systems that are allowing for and aggregating tags. The signal benefit of these systems is that they don't recreate the structured, hierarchical categorization so often forced onto us by our physical systems. Instead, we're dealing with a significant break -- by letting users tag URLs and then aggregating those tags, we're going to be able to build alternate organizational systems, systems that, like the Web itself, do a better job of letting individuals create value for one another, often without realizing it. |
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