Title
Enhancing directed content sharing on the web
Abstract
To find interesting, personally relevant web content, people rely on friends and colleagues to pass links along as they encounter them. In this paper, we study and augment link-sharing via e-mail, the most popular means of sharing web content today. Armed with survey data indicating that active sharers of novel web content are often those that actively seek it out, we developed FeedMe, a plug-in for Google Reader that makes directed sharing of content a more salient part of the user experience. FeedMe recommends friends who may be interested in seeing content that the user is viewing, provides information on what the recipient has seen and how many emails they have received recently, and gives recipients the opportunity to provide lightweight feedback when they appreciate shared content. FeedMe introduces a novel design space within mixed-initiative social recommenders: friends who know the user voluntarily vet the material on the user's behalf. We performed a two-week field experiment (N=60) and found that FeedMe made it easier and more enjoyable to share content that recipients appreciated and would not have found otherwise.
Year
DOI
Venue
2010
10.1145/1753326.1753470
human factors in computing systems
Keywords
DocType
Citations 
content sharing,web content,novel design space,google reader,relevant web content,share content,user experience,novel web content,mixed-initiative social recommenders,lightweight feedback,active sharer
Conference
31
PageRank 
References 
Authors
2.39
19
4
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Michael S. Bernstein18604393.80
Adam Marcus2120362.74
David R. Karger3193672233.64
Robert C. Miller44412326.00