From: Joe Jenkins (joe_jenkins@yahoo.com)
Date: Thu Sep 17 1998 - 12:33:42 MDT
---Cen-IT Rob Harris <Rob.Harris@bournemouth.gov.uk> wrote:
>
> I was wondering if you could point me to a resource that would explain
> the 'Human Memeome Project'.
> It sounds most intriguing..... 8)
>
---"J. Maxwell Legg" <income@ihug.co.nz> wrote:
> I'll second that. And to further Fredrick C. Multon's comment:
> I also think excluding commercial and adult sites would be counter
> productive."
---Michael Lorrey <retroman@together.net> wrote:
> I don't think so. Since sex/reproduction is the prime motivator for
the
> vast majority of humanity, leaving it out is stupid, puritanical and
> disingenuous.
It *doesn't* exist, I was making a proposal to create the "Human
Memeome Project". Also, If you don't exclude adult sites, your data
mining effort will conclude that the most popular of all human memes
is "free nude teen pics". The next 100 down the list will be similar.
There is plenty of adult information in personal web sites and I
believe that to be more representative of a human individual than
people looking to make a quick buck. Those sites represent someone's
effort to influence others to spend, not someone's effort to publish
their personal memes on the web.
---Michael Lorrey <retroman@together.net> wrote:
> You are basically wanting to catalogue an index for a super-search >
engine.
>
No, lets say you wanted to collect a snapshot of a specific class of
memes e.g. (idioms/buzz words/catch phrases/figures of speech). Since
most of these phrases are between three and six words, you could start
searching for multiple matches from the greater web of every group of
three to six words you encounter on the web site that is currently
being scanned. Certainly, you would need a super-search engine as a
tool to accomplish this. But the output would be a list of catch
phrases that are common in the meme pool.
Joe Jenkins
joe_jenkins@yahoo.com
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