A common property of Web 2.0 technologies is that they facilitate collabora-
tion and sharing between users with low technical barriers – although usually on
single sites (e.g. Technorati) or with a limited range of information (e.g. RSS,
which we will describe later). In this book we will refer to this collaborative and
sharing aspect as the ‘Social Web’, a term that can be used to describe a subset of
Web interactions that are highly social, conversational and participatory. The So-
cial Web may also be used instead of Web 2.0 as it is clearer what feature of the
Web is being referred to4.
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Open it A common property of Web 2.0 technologies is that they facilitate collabora- tion and sharing between users with low technical barriers – although usually on single sites (e.g. Technorati) or with a limited range of information (e.g. RSS, which we will describe later). In this book we will refer to this collaborative and sharing aspect as the ‘Social Web’, a term that can be used to describe a subset of Web interactions that are highly social, conversational and participatory. The So- cial Web may also be used instead of Web 2.0 as it is clearer what feature of the Web is being referred to4. The Social Web has applications on intranets as well as on the Internet. On the Internet, the Social Web enables participation through the simplification of user contributions via blogsOriginal toplevel document (pdf)
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pavestonelaboringuntitled - (no access) - John G. Breslin, Alexandre Passant, Stefan Decker (auth.) - The Social Semantic Web (2009, Springer) [10.1007_978-3-642-01172-6] - libgen.li.pdf, p21
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