Networked_Performance

Reblogged User Labor Markup Language (ULML)

ULML capture / Burak Arikan & Engin ErodganUser Labor Markup Language (ULML) posted on Serial Consign by Greg J. Smith:

The … screen capture is pulled from the explanation for Burak Arikan and Engin Erdogan’s exciting new User Labor project. With this venture, Burak and Engin have developed User Labor Markup Language (ULML), an XML format for determining the value of online activity, interaction and connectivity. The project neatly dovetails with other web initiatives like Data Portability and OpenSocial but moves beyond discussions about online identity and data ownership into the realm of quantifying the value of user contributions to web services. The User Labor statement contextualizes the project in light of a Web 2.0 business model we have all become rather accustomed to:

Granted, the user is already getting compensated by using the service for free in exchange with advertisement exposition. But, the value of the web service is based on the sum of service facilitation and content production, and the user appears as a stakeholder twice in the service ecology, as the consumer and the producer of the service. Thus, in order for the production cycle to sustain itself in the long term, there should be compensation for producing the content as well as using the service for free. Before speculating on the form of compensation, the value of user contribution needs to be transparent and its metrics should be defined.

This is a really exciting and empowering proposition for the legions of self-appointed and collectively elected info-brokers that populate the web. The mere existence of a metric like this speaks to the possibility of collective ownership of rather than congregation around online communities. At the very least User Labor makes undertakings like Facebook’s Social Ads seem like a fairly self-interested means of tracking and capitalizing on user-generated content.

I don’t really have time to do this project justice, but you should definitely check out userlabor.org for a full description and lots of examples of how ULML could be deployed. Craig Bellamy also weighed in on the project last week and contextualized it in relation to academic production. ULML is currently implemented on Meta-Markets, perhaps we’ll see it elsewhere soon? Great work Burak and Engin!


Nov 11, 13:01
Trackback URL

One Response

  1. links for 2009-11-12 – website of caleb waldorf...:

    [...] User Labor Markup Language (ULML) With this venture, Burak and Engin have developed User Labor Markup Language (ULML), an XML format for determining the value of online activity, interaction and connectivity. The project neatly dovetails with other web initiatives like Data Portability and OpenSocial but moves beyond discussions about online identity and data ownership into the realm of quantifying the value of user contributions to web services. (tags: web2.0 labor socialnetworking socialmedia code bkkrcw) Share: [...]


Leave a comment

Live Stage

Tags


calls + opps performance livestage installation mobile exhibition locative media participatory writings event networked augmented/mixed reality video distributed interactive virtual new media second life intervention net art narrative public conference sound tactical surveillance social networks games festival music technology dance upgrade! reblog conversation history art + science wearable immersive live political urban platform mapping collective wireless activist public/private collaboration social film workshop architecture body web 2.0 tool lecture identity telematic environment intermedia data visualization audio open source place city responsive avatar site-specific software pyschogeography radio object text culture aesthetics hybrid 3-D webcast space ubiquitous theater e-literature audio/visual presence play interview nature global/ization news biotechnology research ecology relational community media robotic archive synthetic physical bioart theory p2p DIY cinema code interdisciplinary light interface live cinema generative hacktivism remix simulation im/material language labor mashup place-specific motion tracking education artificial intelligence free/libre software copyright cyberreality image voice convergence machinima animation algorithmic streaming ARG gift economy censorship re-enactment DJ/VJ multimedia emergence tv webcam asynchronous tag systems nonlinear glitch recycle perception touch fabbing synesthesia semantic web tangible gesture forking unconference hypermedia 1 agency
1 3-D ARG DIY DJ/VJ activist aesthetics agency algorithmic animation architecture archive art + science artificial intelligence asynchronous audio audio/visual augmented/mixed reality avatar bioart biotechnology body calls + opps censorship cinema city code collaboration collective community conference convergence conversation copyright culture cyberreality dance data distributed e-literature ecology education emergence environment event exhibition fabbing festival film forking free/libre software games generative gesture gift economy glitch global/ization hacktivism history hybrid hypermedia identity im/material image immersive installation interactive interdisciplinary interface intermedia intervention interview labor language lecture light live live cinema livestage locative media machinima mapping mashup media mobile motion tracking multimedia music narrative nature net art networked new media news nonlinear object open source p2p participatory perception performance physical place place-specific platform play political presence public public/private pyschogeography radio re-enactment reblog recycle relational remix research responsive robotic second life semantic web simulation site-specific social social networks software sound space streaming surveillance synesthesia synthetic systems tactical tag tangible technology telematic text theater theory tool touch tv ubiquitous unconference upgrade! urban video virtual visualization voice wearable web 2.0 webcam webcast wireless workshop writings

Archives

2010

Feb | Jan

2009

Dec | Nov | Oct | Sep | Aug | Jul
Jun | May | Apr | Mar | Feb | Jan

2008

Dec | Nov | Oct | Sep | Aug | Jul
Jun | May | Apr | Mar | Feb | Jan

2007

Dec | Nov | Oct | Sep | Aug | Jul
Jun | May | Apr | Mar | Feb | Jan

2006

Dec | Nov | Oct | Sep | Aug | Jul
Jun | May | Apr | Mar | Feb | Jan

2005

Dec | Nov | Oct | Sep | Aug | Jul
Jun | May | Apr | Mar | Feb | Jan

2004

Dec | Nov | Oct | Sep | Aug | Jul

What is this?

Networked Performance (N_P) is a research blog that focuses on emerging network-enabled practice.
Read more...

RSS feeds

N_P offers several RSS feeds, either for specific tags or for all the posts. Click the top left RSS icon that appears on each page for its respective feed. What is an RSS feed?

Bloggers

F.Y.I.

Feed2Mobile
Networked
New American Radio
Turbulence.org
Networked_Music_Review
Upgrade! Boston
Thinking Blogger Award

Turbulence Works

These are some of the latest works commissioned by Turbulence.org's net art commission program.
ABSML Ars Virtua Artist-in-Residence (AVAIR) (2007) Bonding Energy Bronx Rhymes Cell Tagging (2006) Data Diaries Domain of Mount Greylock—Video Portal Eclipse FUJI spaces and other places by Nurit Bar-Shai Gothamberg (2007) Grafik Dynamo (2005) Handheld Histories as Hyper-Monuments (2007) html_butoh (2007) I'm Not Stalking You; I'm Socializing by Liz Filardi Invisible Influenced by Will Pappenheimer and Chipp Jansen iPak - 10,000 songs, 10,000 images, 10,000 abuses by Ajaykumar Lumens My Beating Blog (2006) MYPOCKET by Burak Arikan No Time Machine by Daniel C. Howe and Aya Karpinska Nothing Happens: a performance in three acts (2006) Oil Standard (2006) Peripheral n°2: KEYBOARD (2006) Plazaville Recollecting Adams School of Perpetual Training Self-Portrait (2006) ShiftSpace Superfund365, A Site-A-Day (2007) Touching Gravity 2/Tilt Tumbarumba Urban Attractors and Private Distractors (2007) Wikireuse Without A Trace Yeas and Nays [meme.garden] (2006)
More commissions