The first blog that I read addressed the benefit of location
tagging when other forms of tagging fails. This relates to our discussion in
class when we talked about the hashtag used by Utah State University that was
also used by another college. We can use tags to find similar posts, but
somewhere in the middle non-related posts can get intermingled; in this
instance it is beneficial to tag a specific location or event so that all
related posts can be found and connected.
The article stated:
"What if the hashtag didn’t catch on? What if people were
using your target keywords but weren’t actually at the event? What if they were
posting valuable, actionable content, but didn’t use any relevant keywords at
all?
Now, imagine searching for that location on a map, drawing a
virtual perimeter around your area of interest, and visualizing the
content coming only from within those boundaries regardless of what
words were used.
For two weeks during the Olympics, we used
Geofeedia’s platform to create virtual perimeters around 34 Olympic
locations. Then, we gathered all geo-tagged content from five different sources
(Twitter, Instagram, YouTube, Flickr, Picasa) and searched the data for posts
that contained keywords like Olympics, London 2012, #london2012
and a number of others. Here’s what we found:- 170,000 total geo-tagged posts from the 34 locations
- 69% did not contain one of our target keywords
- Many Instagram and Flickr photos didn’t contain a caption at all
While researching I came across a site solely used to post location tagging social media. I was amazed at
how many of them are already out there and in use. There was many that offered
similar benefits, but the majority offered a place for you to simply connect with those
around you by posting your current location. There are many out there, which means people must be using them!
Check out this post to see how many social media
there are, that offers sharing location:
The last article I would like to discuss is one I found on http://techcrunch.com/2013/07/23/location-vs-communication/
From my research, it is evident that there are multiple reasons to use location tagging Social Media platforms. For some individuals there are very apparent benefits to it's use. Others view it as tool that is not essential to their social networking. Regardless of where your opinion lies, location tagging is a something that more and more sites are adapting to.
So the world shall continue to see that yes, I am once again at Twizzleberry getting frozen yogurt.


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ReplyDeleteSamantha, I really enjoyed reading your blog post! I as well, don't feel the need to post my location all the time and when I do post it its like you said, for "bragging reasons." However I didn't think of the benefits that location based services offer. It will be interesting to see if this becomes an increasing trend for more social media sites.
ReplyDeleteThis was a great post! I appreciated the graph, those are always nice with some analysis to back it up. I like that you talked about some of the research that was able to happen because of location based apps. That is super interesting to me!
ReplyDelete