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What is Web 1.0

Managing Social Media Practices in the Digital Economy
The first stage in the WWW, which only offers people one-way communication such as reading the contents.
Published in Chapter:
A Literature Review of Social Media for Marketing: Social Media Use in B2C and B2B Contexts
Bahtışen Kavak (Hacettepe University, Turkey), Neslişah Özdemir (Kastamonu University, Turkey), and Gülay Erol-Boyacı (Başkent University, Turkey)
Copyright: © 2020 |Pages: 30
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-7998-2185-4.ch004
Abstract
Digital economy has become a priority for companies and countries since consumer profile and consumption habits have greatly changed. Companies have begun to transfer the services they offer to the Internet. Also, a digital economy creates networks amongst individuals, communities, companies, and markets. With digitalization, not only have consumers' profiles changed, but marketing tools have changed as well. Social media marketing (SMM) is the product of this trend and is marketing through social media channels (SMCs). Therefore, this chapter examines social media use within business-to-consumer (B2C) and business-to-business (B2B) contexts. Moreover, the authors focus on the differences of SMCs adoption in B2C and B2B contexts.
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The Security, Privacy, and Ethical Implications of Social Networking Sites
Web pages from earlier Web applications, the information is static.
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An Overview and Differentiation of the Evolutionary Steps of the Web X.Y Movement: The Web Before and Beyond 2.0
Web 1.0 services are presentation-oriented content viewing services based on technologies supporting static Web pages (mainly hard-coded HTML pages) without much interaction, used to display information. Typical examples were simple homepages or directory services, such as Altavista, Yahoo, or Netscape, as well as basic supportive tools such as Web development tools (e.g., HTML editors) and basic search engines, such as AliWeb.
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Web 1.0, Web 2.0, and Web 3.0: The Development of E-Business
Web 1.0 describes supply-orientated information-, communication- and transaction processes within the Net Economy. Due to these processes, the supplier and the supply via object-orientated databases constitutes the starting point for related eOffer, eSales, and eTrading processes predominantly carried out by means of E-Procurement, E-Shop, and E-Marketplace platforms. AU37: Reference appears to be out of alphabetical order. Please check
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Web X.0: A Road Map
The traditional Web is now called Web 1.0. It is primarily one-way publishing medium. It supports online transactions and offers only minimal users interaction. It is also called read-only Web.
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The Potential of Social Media as a Communication Tool in Rural Community Development
Web 1.0 was the first generation of the world wide web, also referred to as the read-only web. Web 1.0 began as an information place for businesses to broadcast their information and only allowed users to search for information and read it.
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E-Commerce: The Effect of the Internet and Marketing Evolution
Also called the static Web, it is a basic form of unidirectional communication designed through static content, scarcity or absence of interactivity and proprietary web applications.
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CTE Distance E-Learning Application: A Learner-Centered Approach
The first generation Internet technology characterized by the learner’s reception of information and limited participatory preferences.
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Development of Digital Communication Technologies and the New Media
Web 1.0 is the first years of the internet which only give information to people through web pages without their participation.
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An Exploratory Study on the Role of Websites in Gastronomy Museum Dialogic Communication
A web technology that was used in the early stages of the Internet, in which the user communicates with the other computer in one direction.
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Web 2.0 Technologies and Science Education
A read-only Web allows one-way flow of information from the producer to the reader as the reader cannot modify the web content.
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Using Web 2.0 Tools to Start a WebQuest Renaissance
The first version of the internet that refers to it consisting of mainly static webpages.
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Collaboration Intricacies of Web 2.0 for Training Human Resource Managers
The first incarnation of the internet, used for gathering information on various topics. This version was used by the government and educational institutions, where the emphasis was on individual searching, as opposed to dynamic and interactive contribution capabilities.
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From Web to Web 2.0 and E-Learning 2.0
The first generations of Internet were the users are all consider readers, they cannot interact with the content of the page (no comments, no responses, no quotes, etc). Being entirely limited to what the Webmaster rises to the website.
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Museums on the Web: Interaction with Visitors
The Web perceived as one-to-many communication model with few content creators and many content consumers.
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Social Software and Web 2.0: Their Sociological Foundations and Implications
Web 1.0 is a techno-social system of cognition. Networked information technologies are used as medium that allows humans to publish their ideas and to engage with the ideas of others. Examples are html-based websites.
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An Overview of Web 2.0 and Its Technologies and Their Impact in the Modern Era
It was the first version of the Internet (called ARPANET) that emerged shortly after the Cold War, in the 1960s, with the initial purpose that served the US military objectives, providing information sharing, featuring online content delivery, in short, one of its milestones was e-mail, in 1969, the existence of the Internet Protocol (IP) and HyperText Transfer Protocol Secure (HTTP), providing data traffic by means such as radio, optical fiber and satellite (currently); sending encrypted information and commercial transactions via the Internet. The internet pages were simple, with mostly one-sided information and almost no interaction. The aim was only to discover information, the user being a mere spectator.
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Grounding Principles for Governing Web 2.0 Investments
Web 1.0 refers to the early years of the internet. It marks an era where the main mode of communication between content providers and users was predominantly top-down and centralized. In fact, during this era, the web was very much approached as a continuation of traditional broadcasting media such as television or radio.
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Potential Benefits of Analyzing Website Analytic Data
Web 1.0 refers to the first versions of websites that were and are basically online brochures.
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Communicative Networking and Linguistic Mashups on Web 2.0
A retrospective term which emerged after the advent of Web 2.0, Web 1.0 refers to the original, information-oriented version of the World Wide Web. Created by Tim Berners-Lee in 1989/1990, it consisted of largely static webpages developed by a small number of authors for consumption by a large audience.
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The Evolution of CSR Information Disclosure From Web 1.0 to Web 2.0
The first, static phase of the Internet with primarily read-only content.
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Social Media and Organizational Communication
Online activities centered on client-server architecture, where processing is done by the server, and the client is only used to display the content.
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Web 1.0, Web 2.0 and Web 3.0: The Development of E-Business
Web 1.0 describes supply-orientated information-, communication- and transaction processes within the Net Economy. Due to these processes, the supplier and the supply via object-orientated databases constitutes the starting point for related e-offer-, e-sales-, and e-trading-processes predominantly carried out by means of e-procurement, e-shop, and e-marketplace platforms.
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Understanding the Potentials of Social Media in Collaborative Learning
This is the first stage of the internet that only allows the static content publication with no option for direct modification and/or creation of content by other users.
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When Our Changing Society Meets the Social Media Era
Web 1.0 refers to the state of the World Wide Web, when a set of static Websites were used, providing no interactive content.
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