Functional Systems From Emergant Properties

Adam Bosworth is one of technology's fulcrum people having been at Microsoft to develop Access; BEA to develop Websphere; and now at Google to ride their wave. He makes a comment on the internet, which is the worlds largest co-operative endeavour to date, and the positive effects of crowd wisdom.

From the article titled, Learning From The Web ;

The wisdom of crowds works amazingly well. Successful systems on the Web are bottom-up. They don't mandate much in a top-down way. Instead, they control themselves through tipping points.

For example, Flickr doesn't tell its users what tags to use for photos. Far from it. Any user can tag any photo with anything (well, I don't think you can use spaces). But, and this is a key but, Flickr does provide feedback about the most popular tags, and people seeking attention for their photos, or photos that they like, quickly learn to use that lexicon if it makes sense. It turns out to be amazingly stable. Del.icio.us does the same for links (and did it first, actually).

Google's success in making a more relevant search was based on leveraging the wisdom of crowds (PageRank). RSS 2.0 is taking off because there is a critical mass of people reading it and it is easy to read/write, so people have decided to leverage that when publishing content. It isn't that it is a good or bad format for things other than syndicated content (for which I think it is very good). Rather, it works well enough.

While it is undoubted people have used these systems to create crowd wisdom, specialists (technologists) were required to put those systems into place. It will be the same in politics, politicians will still have a role, but in areas where crowd wisdom provides superior outcomes to politicians, and political parties, the politicians role will be limited to establishing a virtuous system where crowd wisdom can excel. This is very much inside the philosophical boundaries of a Harpurian Republic.
Permalink, Functional Systems From Emergant Properties, Nov 2005, cam
avocadia: Wisdom of crowds: I believe I shall hold off on any decision on the wisdom of crowds until I see how, for example, flickr and del.icio.us tags deal with SEO and spam. k5 was supposed to be a bottom-up community but it turned out it was tits, not bottom.
avocadia: Politicians as moderators: Is that kind of what your point was? You mentioned yesterday that k5 demonstrated that you can\'t leave out high-level mods to filter the crap. So is that where you see politicians?
cam: That is a good analogy: The experience of usenet and k5 was that good editors (ie hulver) are needed to ensure the trolls, flame-baiters, crap-flooders etc dont become the dominant culture. Having politicians as editors (and contributors - but not the total some of contribution) would have an added benefit of the politicians being subject to wider, and anonymous, group wisdom through elections.

cam
cam: total some == total sum: nt

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