New book on tagging
A few weeks ago I bought Gene Smith's book, Tagging: People-Powered Metadata for the Social Web. This looks like it's going to be a great read!
A few weeks ago I bought Gene Smith's book, Tagging: People-Powered Metadata for the Social Web. This looks like it's going to be a great read!
I'm very pro tagging and think that library patrons should be allowed to add tags to bibliographic records in library catalogs. That being said, I'm trying to keep an open mind to see how this social experience of tagging is developing both pro and con. Here's a link to a brief article, "Tagging: It’s no longer fun and easy". It raising some problems that are developing as tagging becomes more popular.
The conclusion is that tagging will become more standardized and complex in the future.
"... in the near future you will either not be bothering with tagging or you’ll have moved on to the next generation of tagging which will be more complex (probably based on XML) and demand more effort to use. Tagging will no longer be fun and easy."
Of course, as catalogers and metadata librarians, we are use to such standardization and complexity using the Library of Congress Subject Headings.
So, my cataloger's OCD is kicking in and instead of assigning tags with wild abandon, I'm creating a list of tags--a "controlled vocabulary" for this blog. For those catalogers who are new to tagging (like me), here's a great overview "Tagging vs. Cataloging: What It's All About" by Chiara Fox who is a former librarian turned information architect.
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