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A WorldCat community
Using WorldCat.org to build a social network of the world’s library users
By Tom Storey
Online ratings, tags, reviews, recommendations, lists, rankings, personal
profiles—the social media revolution is here. It seems the world has
exploded with Web 2.0, social networking tools and sites.
Some of the signs?
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Social networking behemoth MySpace attracted
more than 114 million global visitors age
15 and older in June 2007, a 72-percent increase
versus a year ago according to comScore, a
leader in measuring the digital world.
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The number of average daily visitors to Facebook was 15 million, up 300 percent from a year earlier,
and users averaged 3½ hours per visit.
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Google’s October 2006 acquisition for $1.65
billion of video juggernaut YouTube, which had
189 million visitors in June 2007. Each day,
YouTube users view more than 100 million video
clips and create some 65,000 new videos.
Social networking is more than a fad as hundreds
of millions of people around the world visit social networking
sites each month. It is an activity that is being
woven into the very fabric of the global Internet.
OCLC wants to establish a social network of the
world’s library users with WorldCat.org. Jasmine de
Gaia, Global Product Manager, Social Networking
Initiatives, notes that in the online user landscape,
there has been a change in expectations, especially
the level of involvement.
“Users want a better experience with more value,” she
says. “They want to be involved with creating and organizing
new content. A shift to user-generated content
is clearly evident in the information space. The library
community has an opportunity to build services into
its systems that encourage users to contribute their
expertise to the cooperative.”
“Enriching WorldCat with user-contributed content
enriches library catalogs. The ability for online users
to contribute content will make them more dedicated
stakeholders to the library and their library experience
more meaningful.”
Among the new, interactive social networking
tools that have been added to WorldCat.org:
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Personal profiles. These free, “My WorldCat”
accounts allow users to establish online profiles to
provide greater detail about themselves. Users create
identities by listing name, location, interests, occupation,
photos, e-mail address, library affiliation and links
to other accounts, such as personal Web pages, RSS
feeds or instant messaging addresses. Providing this
personal information is optional, and users can control
the public availability of their e-mail addresses or their
entire profiles via privacy settings. All a user needs is
an e-mail address to create a WorldCat account.
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Create and share lists. Users can add items
cataloged in WorldCat to personalized lists. Users
can build as many lists as they like on any subject—recommended mystery novels, favorite children’s
books, best jazz CDs, top professional reading. They
can group items owned by their library and other
WorldCat libraries, and share their lists with friends,
colleagues and millions of site users. Or they can
keep their lists private.
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Ratings and reviews. WorldCat.org users
can add content, such as factual notes, tables of
contents, ratings and critiques, under the Details and
Reviews tabs for any item. Detail notes remain freely
editable by all users, while reviews can be revised
only by their original authors. Users can return at anytime,
log in and create or revise content. Guidelines
are provided.
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Citation management. Item
records in WorldCat.org include a“Cite this Item” link that provides
bibliographic citations in five
common styles: APA, Chicago,
Harvard, MLA and Turabian.
Displayed in a separate pop-up
window, the citations follow
the reference standard for
each style. Users may copy
and paste the needed format
into a bibliography. Users may
also generate citations for an
entire list of items in one of the five
formats or export the list as desired.
Those tools that will be added in
the future:
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Social tagging. This is a type of collaborative
categorization using informally assigned, user-defined
keywords. Folksonomy tags are assigned
by users “on the fly” and are extremely popular as a
grassroots way to organize the digital world of Web
pages, blogs, video clips, photo sharing sites—where
millions of items are generated on an hourly basis. The
intent of tagging is to make a body of electronic information
increasingly easy to search, discover and
navigate. WorldCat.org users will be able to virtually
label records and lists of books, eBooks, audiobooks,
DVDs, CDs, online articles, music scores—anything
found in WorldCat. There will be no limit to
the number of tags users can assign to an item. And
users will be able to view other users’ tags to see
which tag words get the best responses from the
WorldCat community, and do their own
tagging accordingly.
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Recommender service. Users
will have the ability to receive
and contribute recommendations
through a variety of data
sources, including metadata,
activity tracking, lists,
ratings/reviews, circulation
data and expert opinions.
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RSS feeds/notifications.
Feeds are commonly
understood as the aggregation of
update notices for Web sites and
services and are commonly grouped
under the acronym RSS, though other
technologies and standards may be used
to effect the same user experience. WorldCat.org
will offer RSS feeds that continuously push or pull
defined sets of information out of WorldCat.
Users want a better experience, they want to be
involved and they want more value. Social functions
in WorldCat are a step forward in that direction.
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