Annotea: an open RDF infrastructure for shared Web annotations
Proceedings of the 10th international conference on World Wide Web
Creating Semantic Web Contents with Protégé-2000
IEEE Intelligent Systems
On the bursty evolution of blogspace
WWW '03 Proceedings of the 12th international conference on World Wide Web
How to make a semantic web browser
Proceedings of the 13th international conference on World Wide Web
Foundations and Trends in Web Science
Consolidating User-Defined Concepts with StYLiD
ASWC '08 Proceedings of the 3rd Asian Semantic Web Conference on The Semantic Web
An online blog reading system by topic clustering and personalized ranking
ACM Transactions on Internet Technology (TOIT)
An analysis of the use of tags in a blog recommender system
IJCAI'07 Proceedings of the 20th international joint conference on Artifical intelligence
Topic maps-based semblogging with semblog-tm
TMRA'06 Proceedings of the 2nd international conference on Topic maps research and applications
Continuous RDF query processing over DHTs
ISWC'07/ASWC'07 Proceedings of the 6th international The semantic web and 2nd Asian conference on Asian semantic web conference
Semantic Web computing in industry
Computers in Industry
An analysis of network structure and post content for blog post recommendation
DASFAA'11 Proceedings of the 16th international conference on Database systems for advanced applications
The change in user and IT dynamics: Blogs as IT-enabled virtual self-presentation
Computers in Human Behavior
Web Semantics: Science, Services and Agents on the World Wide Web
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The phenomenon known as Web logging (''blogging'') has helped realize an initial goal of the Web: to turn Web content consumers (i.e., end users) into Web content producers. As the Semantic Web unfolds, we feel there are two questions worth posing: (1) do blog entries have semantic structure that can be usefully captured and exploited? (2) Is blogging a natural way to encourage growth of the Semantic Web? We explore empirical evidence for answering these questions in the affirmative and propose means to bring blogging into the mainstream of the Semantic Web, including ontologies that extend the RSS 1.0 specification and an XSL transform for handling RSS 0.9x/2.0 files. To demonstrate the validity of our approach we have constructed a semantic blogging environment based on Haystack. We argue that with tools such as Haystack, semantic blogging will be an important paradigm by which metadata authoring will occur in the future.