=============================================
   Deadline extended to the 21st of June 2010 
   Please forward to interested colleagues and students
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BLOGTALK 2010 http://2010.blogtalk.net
The 7th International Conference on Social Software
Galway, Ireland, 26-28 August 2010

Important Dates
===============

Regular paper submissions due: 21 June 2010
Notification of regular paper acceptance or rejection: 7th July 2010
Camera-ready regular papers due: 12 July 2010

Demonstration and poster abstracts due: 7 July 2010 (no full papers)
Notification of demo and poster acceptance or rejection: 14 July 2010

Brief
=====

* Audience: practitioners, developers, researchers (academia and industry)
* Topics: social software, social media, blogs, microblogs, networks, etc.
* Format: talks, demos and posters, discussion panels, breakout sessions
* Keynote speakers: Stowe Boyd (/Message); Don Thibeau (OpenID Foundation)
* Conference: 26-27 August; workshop ("MicroBlogTalk"): 28 August
* Medieval castle banquet: 26 August (early booking advised)
* Website: http://2010.blogtalk.net/

Introduction
============

Following the international success of the past six BlogTalk events, the next 
BlogTalk - to be held in Galway, Ireland from 26-28 August 2010 - is continuing 
with its focus on social software, while remaining committed to the diverse 
cultures, practices and tools of our emerging networked society. The conference 
is designed to maintain a sustainable dialog between developers of innovative 
social software solutions, academics and researchers who study and advance 
social software and social media, practitioners and administrators in corporate 
and educational settings, and other general members of the social software and 
social media communities.

Due to the interdisciplinary nature of the conference, audiences will come from 
different fields of practice and will have different professional backgrounds. 
We strongly encourage proposals to bridge these cultural differences and to be 
understandable for all groups alike.  For researchers, BlogTalk is an ideal 
conference for presenting and exchanging research work from current and future 
social software projects at an international level. For developers, the 
conference is a great opportunity to fly ideas, visions and prototypes in front 
of a distinguished audience of peers, to discuss, to link-up and to learn. For 
practitioners, this is a venue to discuss use cases for social software and 
social media, and to report on any results you may have with like-minded 
individuals.

We invite you to submit papers describing your research and applications at the 
BlogTalk 2010 conference. To encourage submission of various types of work by 
researchers, developers and practitioners, papers can be submitted in either of 
two tracks:

* Regular Track (full paper required, 12-14 pages in LNCS format). We expect 
papers that discuss mature and implemented work, both regarding (1) practical 
or industrial implementations and use-case reports for social software and 
social media, or (2) theoretical and research aspects of social networks and 
social data. Papers should clearly motivate the approach and provide relevant 
evaluations. Each submission will be reviewed by three members of the Program 
Committee.
* Demonstration and Poster Track (a two-page abstract describing what will be 
presented). This track gives the opportunity to present recent and in-progress 
work, in a forum that will encourage discussions since this track will be held 
in a special session with ample time for discussions and networking.

Topics of particular interest include, but are not limited to:

* Applications of social networking;
* Architectures of social software applications;
* Business use cases and return on experience;
* Categorisation, folksonomies and social tagging;
* Collaboration and content sharing on the Web and in the enterprise;
* Data acquisition and data mining;
* Data portability;
* Digital rights;
* Ethnography studies of social networking platforms;
* Human computer interaction;
* Identity, privacy, trust and reputation;
* Real-time Social Web, microblogging and the Mobile Web;
* Semantic Web, Linked Data and knowledge representation for the Social Web;
* Uses in domains: e-government, health care, education, politics;
* Virtual worlds;
* Web standards for social data;
* Wikis and open collaboration.

Why Galway?
===========

Ranked as one of the 25 top destinations to visit in Europe by TripAdvisor, 
Galway has simply got it all. Galway is generally regarded as the cultural 
capital of the Ireland and is a vibrant and cosmopolitan city where visitors 
are assured of a warm welcome. The city's lively arts and social scene, rich 
sporting culture and reputation as a laid-back festival town mean there is 
something to suit all interests. And those who want to explore the rugged 
beauty of the west coast of Ireland (the Burren and Connemara) will have a 
perfect base.

BlogTalk will be held in the Information Technology Building at NUI Galway, an 
Irish university established in 1845. NUI Galway is also home to DERI, one of 
the world's largest Semantic Web research institutes with over 125 people from 
27 nations.

What is BlogTalk?
=================

> From its beginnings, the Internet has fostered communication, collaboration 
> and networking between users. However, the first boom at the turn of the 
> millennium was mainly driven by a rather one-sided interaction: e-commerce, 
> portal sites and the broadcast models of mainstream media were introduced to 
> the Web. Over the last six or seven years, new tools and practices have 
> emerged which emphasise the social nature of computer-mediated interaction. 
> Commonly (and broadly) labeled as social software, they encompass 
> applications such as blogs and microblogs, wikis, social networking sites, 
> real-time chat systems, and collaborative classification systems 
> (folksonomies). The growth and diffusion of social software has in part been 
> enabled by certain innovative principles of software development (e.g. 
> open-source projects, open APIs, etc.), and in part by empowering the 
> individual user to participate in networks of peers on different scales.

Every year, the International Conference on Social Software (BlogTalk) brings 
together different groups of people using and advancing the Internet and its 
usage: technical and conceptual developers, researchers with interdisciplinary 
backgrounds, and practitioners alike. It is designed to initiate a dialog 
between users, developers, researchers and others who share, analyse and enjoy 
the benefits of social software. The focus is on social software as an 
expression of a culture that is based on the exchange of information, ideas and 
knowledge. Moreover, we understand social software as a new way of relating 
people to people and to machines, and vice versa. In the spirit of the free 
exchange of opinions, links and thoughts, a wide range of participants can 
engage in this discourse.

BlogTalk enables participants to connect and discuss the latest trends and 
happenings in the world of social software. It consists of a mix of 
presentations, panels, face-to-face meetings, open discussions and other 
exchanges of research, with attendees sharing their experiences, opinions, 
software developments and tools. Developers are invited to discuss 
technological developments that have been designed to improve the utilisation 
of social software, as well as reporting about the current state of their 
software and projects. This includes new blog and wiki applications, 
content-creation and sharing environments, advanced groupware and tools, 
client-server designs, GUIs, APIs, content syndication strategies, devices, 
applications for microblogging, and much more. Researchers are asked to focus 
on their visions and interdisciplinary concepts explaining social software 
including, but not limited to, viewpoints from social sciences, cultural 
studies, psychology, education, law!
and natural sciences. Practitioners can talk about the practical use of social 
software in professional and private contexts, around topics such as 
communication improvements, easy-to-use knowledge management, social software 
in politics and journalism, blogging as a lifestyle, etc.

BlogTalk has attracted prominent speakers in the past, and previous keynote 
speakers include Yeonho Oh, Isaac Mao, Nova Spivack, Salim Ismail, Michael 
Breidenbrücker, danah boyd, Matt Mullenweg, and Rod Smith. 2010 will also 
feature a stellar lineup of keynotes, including: Stowe Boyd, an authority on 
social tools and their impact on media, business, and society; and Don Thibeau, 
executive director of the OpenID Foundation. Since one of the main motivations 
for organising and running BlogTalk every year is for attendees to be able to 
meet and connect with a diverse set of people that are fascinated by and work 
in the online digital world, we encourage you to attend and participate in 
BlogTalk 2010.

Paper Submission
================

Regular Track
-------------

Submissions will undergo a thorough and competitive pre-conference reviewing 
and selection process. Each (full) paper is allowed between 12 and 14 pages (in 
the LNCS single-column page format, see 
http://www.springer.com/computer/lncs?SGWID=0-164-6-793341-0). Please upload 
your submission along with some personal information using the EasyChair 
conference area for BlogTalk 2010 
(http://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=blogtalk2010). You will receive a 
confirmation of the arrival of your submission immediately. The submission 
deadline is 14 June 2010, and abstracts must be submitted a week earlier.

Following notification of acceptance, you will be invited to submit a 
camera-ready paper for the conference proceedings. The proceedings for BlogTalk 
2009 were accepted for Springer's LNCS series; we are currently negotiating 
with the publisher for 2010. BlogTalk is a peer-reviewed conference.

(Due to the tight schedule we expect that there will be no deadline extension. 
As with previous BlogTalk conferences, we will work hard to endow a fund for 
supporting travel costs. As soon as we review all of the papers we will be able 
to announce more details.)

Demonstration and Poster Track
------------------------------

You must submit a two-page abstract of the work you intend to present for 
review purposes. You should provide links to web demos of your work. There are 
no full papers required in this track. The submission deadline is 7 July 2010.

Panels
======

Panels should address timely topics relevant to the themes of the conference. 
Please submit proposals to the Conference Co-Chairs ([email protected]) by 
14 June 2010.

Social Events
=============

We will have a medieval banquet on 26 August at Dunguaire Castle, Kinvara, Co. 
Galway. As there is limited capacity, we advise that early booking for this 
event will be necessary. More information is available on our website. (There 
will be two sessions, one at 5:30 and one at 8:45.)

Committees
==========

General Chair: John Breslin (NUI Galway / boards.ie)

Programme Chair: Alexandre Passant (DERI, NUI Galway)

Programme Committee:

* Gabriela Avram (University of Limerick)
* Daniela Barbosa (Dow Jones / DataPortability Project)
* Anne Bartlett-Bragg (Headshift)
* Mark Bernstein (Eastgate Systems)
* Stephanie Booth (Climb to the Stars)
* Thomas N. Burg (Socialware)
* Rob Cawte (Web Heavies)
* Fabien Gandon (INRIA)
* Josephine Griffith (NUI Galway)
* Conor Hayes (DERI, NUI Galway)
* Renato Iannella (National ICT Australia)
* Akshay Java (Microsoft)
* Philipp Kaerger (L3S Research Center)
* Sheila Kinsella (DERI, NUI Galway)
* Pranam Kolari (Yahoo!)
* Cameron Marlow (Facebook)
* Michael Maximilien (IBM)
* Daniel Olmedilla (Telefonica)
* Davide Palmisano (Fondazione Bruno Kessler)
* Christine Perey (Perey Research and Consulting)
* David Peterson (davidseth.net / SitePoint)
* Jan Schmidt (Hans Bredow Institut)
* Amit Sheth (Wright State University)
* Hideaki Takeda (NII Japan)
* Mischa Tuffield (Garlik)
* Paolo Valdemarin (Evectors)
* Seokchan "Channy" Yun (Seoul National University)
* David Weinberger (Berkman Center for Internet and Society)
* Ton Zylstra (Interdependent Thoughts)

Steering Committee: Thomas N. Burg (BlogTalk 2003, 2004), Anne Bartlett-Bragg 
(BlogTalk 2005), Jan Schmidt (BlogTalk 2006), John Breslin (BlogTalk 2008), 
Hong-Gee Kim (BlogTalk 2009)

Contact
=======

http://2010.blogtalk.net/
[email protected]

--
Dr. Alexandre Passant
Digital Enterprise Research Institute
National University of Ireland, Galway
:me owl:sameAs <http://apassant.net/alex> .






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