- From: Paul Francis <francis@cactus.slab.ntt.jp>
- Date: Fri, 23 Jun 95 13:29:02 JST
- To: wex@media.mit.edu
- Cc: rating@junction.net, uri@bunyip.com, www-talk@www10.w3.org
> > It seems you've got a lot of erroneous assumptions; I suggest you try the > system for yourself and form an opinion. I agree, I need to play with it more, however.... > But maybe I'm just confused. Understandably. I rather pulled you into the middle of an already ongoing discussion. I was not suggesting that webhound as it is would do what I mentioned. I meant to suggest that the overall notion of using correlations of peoples' individual opinions could be used as the basis of what amounts to a personalized rating system. > > You seem to think: > - we're imposing rating; we're not, the ratings come from the users Yes, I know. What I was suggesting was that the history of similarity between users' ratings could be the basis for future ratings. So for instance, I have a history of agreeing with a group of other people on what resources I find unsuitable for my children. A new resource comes along, and several of the people who have a history of agreeing with me have labeled the new resource as unsuitable. When my child logs in and requests to see that resource, the resource is first passed through the filter, is labeled as unsuitable, and not shown to my child. Something like that. > - we're actively including material (URLs in Webhound's case); we're > not, the database of URLs is user-grown (thus we only have around 10,000 > URLs in the database; Webcrawler claims to have over 3 million URLs) This I also understood. As I describe above, the users themselves would do the rating and input them into the system. > - I am responsible for Webhound; I'm not. Webhound is the product This I wasn't clear on.... :-{ > > Finally, I'm still not sure what you're concerned about. Are you bothered > that Webhound may not recommend to people documents they don't want to see > but by some measure you think they should know about? > I didn't mean to come across as critical. I'm not bother by Webhound at all. Quite the opposite. I think it is cool, and that a similar system could be used as an effective means of creating "personalized warning labels". Such a system strikes me as far superior to having some government committee or any other committee for that matter sticking on the warning labels themselves. Given the noise that American politicians are currently making about controling the content of the web, it would be great if someone from media lab could enhance what you've already done to address this particular aspect of the problem. PF
Received on Friday, 23 June 1995 00:29:36 UTC