voting-examples: Difference between revisions
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* Tantek Çelik | * Tantek Çelik | ||
* Steve Ivy | * Steve Ivy | ||
== Related Pages == | |||
* [[voting-brainstorming]] | |||
== Discussion/Concepts == | == Discussion/Concepts == | ||
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* Most example sites, including Digg, UrbanDictionary.com, and Slashdot all use plain text labels or images for marking up their voting features. | * Most example sites, including Digg, UrbanDictionary.com, and Slashdot all use plain text labels or images for marking up their voting features. | ||
== See Also == | |||
* [http://www.w3.org/TR/2002/REC-xhtml1-20020801/ XHTML SE] | * [http://www.w3.org/TR/2002/REC-xhtml1-20020801/ XHTML SE] | ||
* [[vote-links]] | * [[vote-links]] | ||
* [http://dbpubs.stanford.edu:8090/pub/1999-66 Stanford paper describing an early version of PageRank] | * [http://dbpubs.stanford.edu:8090/pub/1999-66 Stanford paper describing an early version of PageRank] |
Revision as of 19:43, 5 January 2007
Voting Examples
The Problem
There has been a good bit of discussion relating to how to represent the intent of a link from one site to another as an endorsement of that site or not. See Kevin Marks on voting (Vote Links) for initial arguments for a way to represent this information.
This page serves to document the current list of voting examples from real world sites for the design of a simple voting microformat. - Steve Ivy
Participants
- Kevin Marks
- Tantek Çelik
- Steve Ivy
Related Pages
Discussion/Concepts
(This may belong on a page of its own)
- When is a link an endorsement? - Nathan Ashby-Kuhlman
- Anti-links - linking to things you disagree with and saying so - Kevin Marks
- Vote Links - Kevin Marks
- PageRank is Dead - Jeremy Zawodny
Real-World Examples
Centralized Implementations
- Digg - Digg is essentially a centralized voting system for links. Digg users can "digg" (vote-for) a link. Links with more diggs float to the top of the popular lists, hence getting more exposure and getting more diggs/votes for and against. Markup is plain html - links and images. However, the semantics of a digg are still unclear - links often get many diggs though the majority of commenters disagree with the content of the linked page. Comments on links can also be voted for or against - 'digg' or 'bury'.
- Link and descriptions
- # of votes ('for' votes)
- controls to vote ('digg')
- controls to vote on comments ('digg' or 'bury')
- Urban Dictionary - dictionary of colloquialisms where users can vote up or down (for/against) terms in the dictionary. Markup is plain html - tables and images.
- Term and Definition
- # of votes 'up' and 'down'
- controls to vote ('up' or 'down')
- Google's PageRank - "In essence, Google interprets a link from page A to page B as a vote, by page A, for page B." Issues with PageRank's "any link is a good link" model are a major impetus to standardizing on a format for link-intention.
- Slashdot - users can give comments a karma score which affects what comments are seen (comments can be filtered based on the score)
- del.icio.us, ma.gnolia, Technorati favorites - bookmarking sites that more or less represent a "for" vote
Vote Links
There are a few implementations based on the VoteLinks microformat combined with other technologies:
- Distributed votings using microformats from Artweb Design
- Boost Your Hyperlink Power - Jeremy Keith, using CSS to surface vote information
- VoteBack - VoteLink discovery + pingback/trackback
Example: Vote Links
(from: VoteLinks microformat)
<a rev="vote-for" href="http://ragingcow.blogspot.com" title="neat spoof">Raging Cow</a> <a rev="vote-against" href="http://ragingcow.com" title="nasty corn syrup drink">Raging Cow</a>
Existing Practices
- Most example sites, including Digg, UrbanDictionary.com, and Slashdot all use plain text labels or images for marking up their voting features.