Taxonomy and Folksonomy of Twitter

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Taxonomy of Twitter
Taxonomy is known as a “formal classification using a tiered term structure.” One of the taxonomies of Twitter could be the ways in which it categorises Verified and Unverified accounts. These are shown through a recognisable blue tick next to a Username and separates famous public figures from the general public. This is very useful as often public figures can be imitated or mocked online through parody accounts, therefore this verified tick lets us know whether the person we follow is the actual person we believe them to be, or if they are a fake account.
Among the whole of twitter, anyone can become involved. Each user is given (through choice) their own Twitter Handle. For example @_harrieth, which allows me to be individually separated from others among the platform, such as @BarackObama. This makes it easier for everyone to be found, as well as allowing them to have their own personal profile where they can follow whomever they like and post their opinions.
Twitter Folksonomy
Folksonomy, or commonly known as social tagging, is a system in which users can apply public tags to online items, determined by everyday public. As a user the Folksonomies will democratise the way that information is structured; they’re more useful to users.The way we use the folksonomy on Twitter helps us to determine who we wish to connect with and who we desire to target. Hashtags and usernames come under elements of this Twitter Folksonomy, these are known as abbreviations, word of phrases preceded by a crosshatch symbol. You can use a hashtag within your tweets like so…
Screenshot of a tweet with a hashtag
ltjw hashtag
People who click this hashtag may then see tweets made by other Users with the same hashtag. This is great for online communities or live tweeting as all of the tweets can be sent to one place and found via one hashtag.
Next time you find yourself on twitter, why don’t you hashtag one of your interests? This way you may find new people to connect with and more people who have similar interests as you do.