- Authors
- Roman Hoegg
- Robert Martignoni
- Miriam Meckel
- Katarina Stanoevska-Slabeva
- title
- Overview of business models for Web 2.0 communities
- Please use the following URL when quoting:
- https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:bsz:14-qucosa-139690
- original_z0
- Klaus Meißner & Martin Engelien (Hrsg.), GeNeMe '06: Gemeinschaften in Neuen Medien, TU Dresden, 28./29.09.2006, Dresden: TUDpress, ISBN: 3-938863-77-3, S. 33-49
- Source
- GeNeMe '06
- publication_date
- 2006
- Abstract (EN)
- A new type of communities is gaining momentum on the web and is reshaping online communication and collaboration patterns and the way how information is consumed and produced [Gros04, Kolb06]. Examples of such communities are Wikipedia, MySpace, OpenBC, YouTube, Folksonomies, numerous Weblogs and others. In literature different terms can be found to denote the emerging and growing new phenomenon: social software [Bäch06] or peer production [Scho05]. In the year 2005, Tim O'Reilly popularized the term Web 2.0 [O'Reil05]. While the first two terms can be applied also to earlier, already established forms of online communities (for an overview see [Stan02]), the term Web 2.0 is mostly applied to emphasize the differences of emerging communities compared to earlier forms of online communities, encompassing various perspectives - technology, attitude, philosophy. (...)
- Keywords (DE)
- Konferenz, GeNeMe 2006, Neue Medien, Web 2.0, Geschäftsmodelle
- Keywords (EN)
- new media, social media, web 2.0, business model, MCM Business Model Framework
- Classification (DDC)
- 330
- Classification (RVK)
- QR 760
- university_publisher
- Technische Universität Dresden, Dresden
- URN Qucosa
- urn:nbn:de:bsz:14-qucosa-139690
- Qucosa date of publication
- 11.04.2014
- Document type
- in_proceeding
- Document language
- English
- licence