Difference between revisions of "Web 2.0"
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− | '''Web 2.0''' refers to a [[World Wide Web|Web]] environment on the [[Internet]] that enables and supports user-contributed and managed content. The leading examples of this dynamic would be [[ | + | '''Web 2.0''' refers to a [[World Wide Web|Web]] environment on the [[Internet]] that enables and supports user-contributed and managed content. The leading examples of this dynamic would be [[Directory:EBay|eBay]], [[Directory:Digg|Digg]], and [[Directory:Wikipedia|Wikipedia]]. |
Critics such as [[Directory:Andrew Keen|Andrew Keen]] have taken a pessimistic view of Web 2.0, saying: | Critics such as [[Directory:Andrew Keen|Andrew Keen]] have taken a pessimistic view of Web 2.0, saying: |
Latest revision as of 16:45, 20 November 2008
Web 2.0 refers to a Web environment on the Internet that enables and supports user-contributed and managed content. The leading examples of this dynamic would be eBay, Digg, and Wikipedia.
Critics such as Andrew Keen have taken a pessimistic view of Web 2.0, saying:
[The] Web 2.0 movement, [fuses] '60s radicalism with the utopian eschatology of digital technology. The ideological outcome may be trouble for all of us.
Actually, the site MyWikiBiz is a child of the Web 2.0 movement, but can also be considered a Web 3.0 experiment.