Online reputation systems were created to enable buyers and sellers participating in online transactions to evaluate the reputations of potential trading partners. These systems were then expanded to additional domains targeting the evaluation of encounters with professionals such as university professors, teachers, and physicians. This paper examines key properties of two online reputations systems: eBay’s Feedback Forum and the Rate My Professors online reputation system. A framework for understanding the information quality of online reputation systems is then developed and applied. Implications for designers, teachers, and scholars are discussed
To handle the uncertainty inherent in eCommerce transactions, reputation systems have emerged as a w...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. August 2012. Major: Economics. Advisor:Patrick Bajari, T...
Online reputation systems are certainly the most overlooked 'heroes' of today's social Web. While th...
As electronic commerce developed, it became clear that buyers and sellers needed a way to evaluate t...
Online reputation systems are the means for reducing information asymmetry among the parties involve...
In an online environment, the aim of reputation systems is to let parties rate each other and to hel...
This paper examines the value of seller reputation for e‐retailers trading via a price comparison si...
Background: Centralized Online Reputation Systems (ORS) have been widely used by internet companies....
Online reputation systems have evolved to increase our knowledge of sellers, products, services, and...
Users on the internet are looking for ways to minimize their experiences in performing online transa...
In recent years, online rating and reputational mechanisms have become increasingly important in the...
Online marketplaces have proliferated over the past decade, creating new markets where none existed....
In the last years, online rating and reputational mechanisms have become increasingly important in t...
Although online communities make it possible for a far greater number of participants to interact on...
We present a framework for identifying the different dimensions of online reputation and characteriz...
To handle the uncertainty inherent in eCommerce transactions, reputation systems have emerged as a w...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. August 2012. Major: Economics. Advisor:Patrick Bajari, T...
Online reputation systems are certainly the most overlooked 'heroes' of today's social Web. While th...
As electronic commerce developed, it became clear that buyers and sellers needed a way to evaluate t...
Online reputation systems are the means for reducing information asymmetry among the parties involve...
In an online environment, the aim of reputation systems is to let parties rate each other and to hel...
This paper examines the value of seller reputation for e‐retailers trading via a price comparison si...
Background: Centralized Online Reputation Systems (ORS) have been widely used by internet companies....
Online reputation systems have evolved to increase our knowledge of sellers, products, services, and...
Users on the internet are looking for ways to minimize their experiences in performing online transa...
In recent years, online rating and reputational mechanisms have become increasingly important in the...
Online marketplaces have proliferated over the past decade, creating new markets where none existed....
In the last years, online rating and reputational mechanisms have become increasingly important in t...
Although online communities make it possible for a far greater number of participants to interact on...
We present a framework for identifying the different dimensions of online reputation and characteriz...
To handle the uncertainty inherent in eCommerce transactions, reputation systems have emerged as a w...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. August 2012. Major: Economics. Advisor:Patrick Bajari, T...
Online reputation systems are certainly the most overlooked 'heroes' of today's social Web. While th...