A social bookmarking website is a centralized online service that allows users to store and share Internet bookmarks. Such a website typically offers a blend of social and organizational tools, such as annotation, categorization, folksonomy-based tagging, social cataloging and commenting. The website may also interface with other kinds of services, such as citation management software and social networking sites.[1]
Name | Description |
---|---|
BibSonomy | A system for sharing bookmarks and lists of literature. |
Digg | A news aggregator with an editorially driven front page. |
Diigo | Designed to bookmark web pages and highlight key points for reference. Has both a free version and a premium version. |
Hatena | Hatena Bookmark is a social bookmarking service by a Japanese company. It is often colloquially referred to as Hatebu. |
Pearltrees | Collaborative bookmark exploration and curation tool organized and presented like a mind map. |
A web and mobile application that offers visual discovery, collection, sharing, and storage of images. | |
Pinboard | Pinboard has a plain design and a focus on personal management of bookmarks using tags to organize them, similar to early versions of the Delicious social bookmarking service |
Established in 2007, for storing, sharing, and discovering web bookmarks. Requires registration. | |
Users submit content in the form of either a link or a text ("self") post. Links and content can be voted on. | |
SiteBar | A free online bookmarking manager. It is open source software, mainly funded by authors' donations. |
We Heart It | An image-based social network for inspiring images. |
Plurk | A free social networking and micro-blogging service that allows users to send updates (known as plurks) through short messages or links, which can be up to 210 text characters in length (previously 140). |
Scoop.it | A content curation website that lets businesses and professionals to research and publish content. |
A content aggregator website that allows users to share, group, and collect content from multiple sources. |
Defunct sites
editName | Description | BookmarkSync | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
CiteULike | A web service that allowed users to save and share citations to academic papers. | |||
Clipmarks | a Delicious-like social bookmarking service, bought by Clipboard in 2012.[2] | |||
Connotea | discontinued service on March 12, 2013. | |||
Delicious | The site was bought by Avos Systems on April 27, 2011, though was operated by Yahoo! until July 2011.[3] On June 1, 2017, Delicious was acquired by Pinboard, and the service will be discontinued. As of March 2018, the website is read-only. | |||
Faves | as of January 2012, the service is no longer active. | |||
Furl | web page clipping and archiving service, founded in 2003 and acquired by Diigo in 2009.[4] | |||
Gnolia | formerly Ma.gnolia | |||
My Web | as of November 2005 - Internet Expert | |||
oneview | ||||
Simpy | formerly de.lirio.us | |||
StumbleUpon | StumbleUpon was a discovery engine that finds and recommends web content to its users. It has moved to Mix | |||
Trackle | Trackle offered a variety of information categories that users could keep tabs on and share like-interests with groups of users via Twitter, SMS, and Email. | |||
Twine | Twine existed from 2007 to 2010. Now shut down. | |||
Newsvine | Owned by NBC, Community-powered which hosts content from its users and syndicated content. Discontinued on October 1, 2017, redirected to NBCNEWS web page | |||
Xmarks | Syncs bookmarks (folders & sub-folders) and profiles across different browsers and platforms. Includes sharing option and possibility to access bookmarks via web-based interface. On May 1, 2018, Xmarks was discontinued after being acquired by LastPass. |
See also
editNotes and references
edit- ^ Gilbertson, Scott (November 6, 2006). "Social Bookmarking Showdown". Wired.
- ^ "As Social Bookmarking Reignites, Venture-Backed Clipboard Acquires Clipmarks & Amplify".
- ^ Guynn, Jessica (27 April 2011). "Bookmark this: YouTube's Chad Hurley and Steve Chen buy Delicious from Yahoo". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 27 April 2011.
- ^ "Diigo Buys Web Page Clipping Service Furl Away From LookSmart".