As I mentioned here during the last boost in users (which was strangely initiated by multi-lingual blogspam), there's a sudden boost in sharing on my feed. I think this is what Hubski is all about - finding references to concepts and associating their user affiliation with it. In fact, there's a concept out there called ambient affiliation that I've studied quite extensively, and that I'm glad to see appear in the day-to-day.
It's nearing 3 AM here and I'm struggling to get what you're saying: Are you referring to the tactic of sneaking in tagging another user in your post or comment, so that they are notified of your post, and thus more likely to share it and essentially draw more attention to your post? If so, I think there's a fine line between intentionally trying to do that and tagging someone where it matters. On Twitter I'm sure it's prevalent and intentionally used for attention frequently, a bit like using way too many hashtags on an instagram that aren't even relevant to the post. On Hubski however there have been few times I could ever call someone out for tagging just to draw attention for shares or something-- probably because at least in my opinion it isn't such a big deal for someone to show off how many shares they got on a post. This is cool stuff, maybe I should just re-read in the morning. How did you end up digging deep on this subject, you mentioned studying it extensively?
To get to the meat of it, it's probably not intentional, and it's probably not to show off. The fact of the matter remains that semantic information is linked to a hashtag on Twitter (as well as hubski!) and that it will have a profound affect on the way this site is handled in the future. It is fascinating to watch. The main points to refer to with regard to the ambient affiliation article are Fig. 3, Fig. 6, and references to logogenisis. On Hubski however there have been few times I could ever call someone out for tagging just to draw attention for shares or something-- probably because at least in my opinion it isn't such a big deal for someone to show off how many shares they got on a post.
well I was gonna give up at first but now I think I actually get it. When you mention that this ambient affiliation is an entirely new cultural process I guess you're absolutely right. At first I was thinking it'd be like writing a journal or book that strategically fits wider/multiple categorizations, in order to grasp the widest possible audience searching through those different shelves in a library. But this is totally different in that it's much more specific and the tags are key to the actual expression of the tweets. On a more irrelevant note, to be honest I'm so awed by behavioral analysis like this, but there's a part of me that sorta winces at the thought of deconstructing behavior; if anything's gonna make you self conscious then god damn that'll do it. In the end things like ambient affiliation sort of grew naturally didn't they? Just a product of human communication, interaction, and development. It seems like we're uncovering a big conspiracy in human nature trying to break everything down like that :D