Augmented Social Network

Information about Augmented Social Network

The Augmented Social Network (ASN) was proposed in a June 2003 paper presented at the PlaNetwork Conference by Ken Jordan, Jan Hauser, and Steven Foster. The paper makes the case for a civil society vision of digital identity that treats Internet users as citizens rather than consumers. The ASN is described as an Internet-wide system that enables users to find others who have relevant interests or expertise, in a context that engenders trust, so that they can form a social network more effectively. At its core is a form of digital identity that supports appropriate introductions between people who share affinities through the recommendations of trusted third parties. It also supports the distribution of media using the same Internet-wide recommendation system.

Objectives

The authors describe the ASN as having three objectives:
  1. To create an Internet-wide system that enables more efficient and effective knowledge sharing between people across institutional, geographic, and social boundaries.
  2. To establish a form of persistent online identity that supports the public commons and the values of civil society.
  3. To enhance the ability of citizens to form relationships and self-organize around shared interests in communities of practice to better engage in the process of democratic governance.


To achieve these objectives, the paper sketches a rough technical architecture that would "enhance the power of social networks by using interactive digital media to exploit the transitive nature of trust through the principle of six degrees of connection."

Elements of the ASN

The core elements of the ASN's technical architecture are:
  1. a form of user-controlled digital identity that is context-sensitive, enables personal recommendations, and is built on open standards;
  2. interoperability between web services (using open standards);
  3. brokering services that can connect individuals who share interests in a context-sensitive manner; and
  4. public interest matching technologies (ontologies and taxonomies) that enable effective Internet-wide searches.


The paper also includes a chapter on the implications digital identity has for an open society. The authors note that
''your digital profile is a representation of aspects of your self that accretes over time. In effect, it is a cumulative digital proxy of you that is built from a pre-determined set of components. The emergence of this new kind of identity representation forces us to think differently about 'official' identity than we did in pre-digital times. Traditionally, in an open and democratic society, 'documented identity' is meant to be as thin as possible. However, in the digital age it will be different. Some form of digital representation of your identity will exist. It will, by its very nature, say more about you than your current forms of identification -- which have relatively thin information.
The authors call for an approach to digital identity that empowers citizens to form social networks in which they can exchange information, collaborate, and self-organize to benefit the public commons and democracy.

The paper, The Augmented Social Network: Building Identity and Trust into the Next-Generation Internet" was published by the journal First Monday. In an interview with Geert Lovink conducted for Nettime, one of the co-authors, Ken Jordan, discusses the ASN in less technical terms. The ASN paper was the inspiration for the Social Web paper published by the PlaNetwork Journal in July 2004.

See also

    June - July - August - September - October - November - December

    Events


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Digital identity refers to the aspect of digital technology that is concerned with the mediation of people's experience of their own identity and the identity of other people and things.
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Internet is a worldwide, publicly accessible series of interconnected computer networks that transmit data by packet switching using the standard Internet Protocol (IP). It is a "network of networks" that consists of millions of smaller domestic, academic, business, and government
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Citizenship is membership in a political community (originally a city or town but now usually a country) and carries with it rights to political participation; a person having such membership is a citizen.
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Heterotroph.


Consumers refers to individuals or households that purchase and use goods and services generated within the economy. The concept of a consumer is used in different contexts, so that the usage and significance of the term may vary.
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social network is a social structure made of nodes (which are generally individuals or organizations) that are tied by one or more specific types of interdependency, such as values, visions, idea, financial exchange, friends, kinship, dislike, conflict, trade, web links, sexual
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Democracy describes small number of related forms of government. The fundamental feature is competitive elections. Competitive elections are usually seen to require freedom of speech (especially in political affairs), freedom of the press, and some degree of rule of law.
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Architecture is the art and science of designing buildings and structures. A wider definition often includes the design of the total built environment: from the macrolevel of town planning, urban design, and landscape architecture to the microlevel of construction details and,
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An open standard is a standard that is publicly available and has various rights to use associated with it.

The terms "open" and "standard" have a wide range of meanings associated with their usage.
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The W3C defines a Web service (many sources also capitalize the second word, as in Web Services) as "a software system designed to support interoperable Machine to Machine interaction over a network.
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Ontology is a study of conceptions of reality and the nature of being. In philosophy, ontology (from the Greek ὤν, genitive ὄντος: of being (part.
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Taxonomy is the practice and science of classification. The word comes from the Greek τάξις, taxis, 'order' +
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Democracy describes small number of related forms of government. The fundamental feature is competitive elections. Competitive elections are usually seen to require freedom of speech (especially in political affairs), freedom of the press, and some degree of rule of law.
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The Social Web refers to two different, yet related concepts. The first is as a description of web 2.0 technologies that are focused on social interaction and community before anything else. The second is a proposal for a future network similar to the World Wide Web.
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2007: January, February, March, April, May, June, July, August, September, October, November, December
2006: January, February, March, April, May, June, July, August, September, October, November, December
2005
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Value networks are complex sets of social and technical resources. They work together via relationships to create economic value. This value takes the form of knowledge. Value networks exhibit interdependence. They account for the overall worth of products and services.
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Value network analysis is a methodology for understanding, using, visualizing, optimizing internal and external value networks and complex economic ecosystems. The methods include visualizing sets of relationships from a dynamic whole systems perspective.
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