block-list: Difference between revisions
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(drafted based on conversations with Jeremy Keith and Ariel Waldman) |
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== examples == | == examples == | ||
See [[block-list-examples]]. | |||
== formats == | == formats == | ||
See [[block-list-formats]]. | |||
== brainstorming == | == brainstorming == | ||
See [[block-list-brainstorming]]. | |||
== issues == | |||
See [[block-list-issues]]. | |||
== see also == | == see also == | ||
* [[block-list-examples]] | |||
* [[block-list-formats]] | |||
* [[block-list-brainstorming]] | |||
* [[social-network-portability]] | * [[social-network-portability]] | ||
* [[hcard-xfn-supporting-friends-lists]] | * [[hcard-xfn-supporting-friends-lists]] |
Latest revision as of 02:29, 30 July 2009
block list
Part of the social network portability effort.
introduction
Many social networking sites provide the user the capability to "block" or "ignore" other users of those sites, typically because those other users are stalking, trolling, harrassing, or behaving negatively in some other way.
The "block list" effort documents how current social networking sites are handling these interactions in the hopes that this research can be used for developing a portable block list that a user could privately share with other sites (probably via oauth or openid or both) so that they could block a troll on one service, and have the troll automatically blocked on other services as well.
examples
See block-list-examples.
formats
See block-list-formats.
brainstorming
issues
See block-list-issues.