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The Wisdom of the Chaperones

Mixed by Olivier Verbeke (CEO @ Whatever) in Social software

30 April
An article originally posted on Slate

“Social-media sites like Wikipedia and Digg are celebrated as shining examples of Web democracy, places built by millions of Web users who all act as writers, editors, and voters. In reality, a small number of people are running the show. According to researchers in Palo Alto, 1 percent of Wikipedia users are responsible for about half of the site’s edits. The site also deploys bots—supervised by a special caste of devoted users—that help standardize format, prevent vandalism, and root out folks who flood the site with obscenities. This is not the wisdom of the crowd. This is the wisdom of the chaperones.”

Read the full article at www.slate.com

In my opinion…

Wisdom of crowds or wisdom of experts?

5 Social Computing Benefits that Adoption Rates Don’t Show

Mixed by Alexis Polet (Trainer @ Whatever) in Enterprise 2.0, Social software

23 April
An article originally posted on Rex's Thought Spot

“… the full value of social computing and enterprise 2.0 is more than the number of people fully interacting. These 5 real benefits just can’t be determined by some magic “participation rate”.”

Read the full article at rexsthoughtspot.blogspot.com

In my opinion…

Here, the author gives a very interesting argument that slow/weak adoption rate of social computing in the enterprise doesn’t mean no benefits…

SocialText Putting A Little Social Into…Enterprise Wikis

Mixed by Raphaël Slinckx (Lead Developer @ Whatever) in Enterprise 2.0, Social software

18 April
An article originally posted on TechCrunch

“Palo Alto based Wiki startup SocialText, founded way back in 2002, is announcing version 3.0 of its software this morning. The upgrades are designed to put a little “social” into the enterprise.”

Read the full article at www.techcrunch.com

In my opinion…

SocialText follows the widget trend by allowing users behind the enterprise firewall to mix and match widgets taking data both from the outside world and the inside world.