Matching events in a content-based subscription system
Proceedings of the eighteenth annual ACM symposium on Principles of distributed computing
Filtering algorithms and implementation for very fast publish/subscribe systems
SIGMOD '01 Proceedings of the 2001 ACM SIGMOD international conference on Management of data
Design and evaluation of a wide-area event notification service
ACM Transactions on Computer Systems (TOCS)
The JEDI Event-Based Infrastructure and Its Application to the Development of the OPSS WFMS
IEEE Transactions on Software Engineering
Efficient Filtering of XML Documents for Selective Dissemination of Information
VLDB '00 Proceedings of the 26th International Conference on Very Large Data Bases
Three Implementations of SquishQL, a Simple RDF Query Language
ISWC '02 Proceedings of the First International Semantic Web Conference on The Semantic Web
The many faces of publish/subscribe
ACM Computing Surveys (CSUR)
An ontology-based publish/subscribe system
Proceedings of the 5th ACM/IFIP/USENIX international conference on Middleware
G-ToPSS: fast filtering of graph-based metadata
WWW '05 Proceedings of the 14th international conference on World Wide Web
Self-organizing publish/subscribe
DSM '05 Proceedings of the 2nd international doctoral symposium on Middleware
Syndication on the Web using a description logic approach
Web Semantics: Science, Services and Agents on the World Wide Web
Efficient and scalable filtering of graph-based metadata
Web Semantics: Science, Services and Agents on the World Wide Web
Characterizing web syndication behavior and content
WISE'11 Proceedings of the 12th international conference on Web information system engineering
A real-time XML protocol for bridging virtual communities
International Journal of Networking and Virtual Organisations
Compact samples for data dissemination
ICDT'07 Proceedings of the 11th international conference on Database Theory
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Recent years have seen a rise in the number of unconventional publishing tools on the Internet. Tools such as wikis, blogs, discussion forums, and web-based content management systems have experienced tremendous rise in popularity and use; primarily because they provide something traditional tools do not: easy of use for non computer-oriented users and they are based on the idea of "collaboration." It is estimated, by pewinternet.org, that 32 million people in the US read blogs (which represents 27% of the estimated 120 million US Internet users) while 8 million people have said that they have created blogs.