Rating, trust and reputation: Difference between revisions

The educational technology and digital learning wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
 
(2 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 12: Line 12:
== Links ==
== Links ==


; Services
; Services and systems


* [http://www.trustplus.com/ TrustPlus] allows to view the reputation of others and build your own reputation anywhere on the Web. E.g. {{quotation|The "TrustPlus Reputation Viewer," a browser add-on, allows users to view anyone's reputation information on-the-fly and across multiple sites. TrustPlus supports some of the Internet's most trafficked destinations, including craigslist, LinkedIn, Facebook, MySpace, eBay, Friendster, Backpage, Amazon and GumTree.}} ([http://www.trustplus.com/about about], retr. jan 2010).
* [http://www.trustplus.com/ TrustPlus] allows to view the reputation of others and build your own reputation anywhere on the Web. E.g. {{quotation|The "TrustPlus Reputation Viewer," a browser add-on, allows users to view anyone's reputation information on-the-fly and across multiple sites. TrustPlus supports some of the Internet's most trafficked destinations, including craigslist, LinkedIn, Facebook, MySpace, eBay, Friendster, Backpage, Amazon and GumTree.}} ([http://www.trustplus.com/about about], retr. jan 2010).
* [http://www.wikitrust.net/ WikiTrust] is an open-source, on-line reputation system for Wikipedia authors and content.  WikiTrust is hosted by the Institute for Scalable Scientific Data Management at the School of Engineering of the University of California, Santa Cruz. To use it for Wikipedias, installation of a Firefox plugin is needed. To use it with your own [[Mediawiki]], you need to install an extension. In addition, this web site also includes papers and tutorials about the algorithms used to compute various "wiki statistics and metrics".


; Articles and web pages
; Articles and web pages
Line 23: Line 25:
* Micceri, Ted (2005). Can We Really Trust Anyone Who Profits from Ranking Higher Education Institutions, or How Would One Evaluate Institutional Quality?, ERIC, ED497448, [http://www.eric.ed.gov/ERICWebPortal/custom/portlets/recordDetails/detailmini.jsp?_nfpb=true&_&ERICExtSearch_SearchValue_0=ED497448&ERICExtSearch_SearchType_0=eric_accno&accno=ED497448 HTML]
* Micceri, Ted (2005). Can We Really Trust Anyone Who Profits from Ranking Higher Education Institutions, or How Would One Evaluate Institutional Quality?, ERIC, ED497448, [http://www.eric.ed.gov/ERICWebPortal/custom/portlets/recordDetails/detailmini.jsp?_nfpb=true&_&ERICExtSearch_SearchValue_0=ED497448&ERICExtSearch_SearchType_0=eric_accno&accno=ED497448 HTML]
*Roger Dingledine, Michael J Freedman, David Molnar, David Parkes, Paul Syvers. (2003), ''Reputation'', [http://freehaven.net/~arma/jean.html HTML]
*Roger Dingledine, Michael J Freedman, David Molnar, David Parkes, Paul Syvers. (2003), ''Reputation'', [http://freehaven.net/~arma/jean.html HTML]
[[Category: Knowledge and idea management]]
[[Category: Knowledge and idea management]]
[[Category: Trust]]

Latest revision as of 10:07, 14 October 2011

Draft

This should become an article dealing with:

i.e. issues related to systems that allow fair ratings of something, e.g. items in learning object repository.

Links

Services and systems
  • TrustPlus allows to view the reputation of others and build your own reputation anywhere on the Web. E.g. “The "TrustPlus Reputation Viewer," a browser add-on, allows users to view anyone's reputation information on-the-fly and across multiple sites. TrustPlus supports some of the Internet's most trafficked destinations, including craigslist, LinkedIn, Facebook, MySpace, eBay, Friendster, Backpage, Amazon and GumTree.” (about, retr. jan 2010).
  • WikiTrust is an open-source, on-line reputation system for Wikipedia authors and content. WikiTrust is hosted by the Institute for Scalable Scientific Data Management at the School of Engineering of the University of California, Santa Cruz. To use it for Wikipedias, installation of a Firefox plugin is needed. To use it with your own Mediawiki, you need to install an extension. In addition, this web site also includes papers and tutorials about the algorithms used to compute various "wiki statistics and metrics".
Articles and web pages
  • Christopher Allen & Shannon Appelcline (2007). Collective Choice: Experimenting with Ratings. Life with Alacrity Blog, HTML
  • Shannon Appelcline (2006). Collective Choice: More Thoughts About Ratings, Blog entry, HTML
  • Jennifer Golbeck, James Hendler (2004). Accuracy of Metrics for Inferring Trust and Reputation in Semantic Web-based Social Networks, PDF
  • Micceri, Ted (2005). Can We Really Trust Anyone Who Profits from Ranking Higher Education Institutions, or How Would One Evaluate Institutional Quality?, ERIC, ED497448, HTML
  • Roger Dingledine, Michael J Freedman, David Molnar, David Parkes, Paul Syvers. (2003), Reputation, HTML