Strengthening security within the domain of shared knowledge is a critical issue, and great challenge, to businesses today. A number of different protocols currently available offer an array of benefits and limitations.

by JinKyu Lee, Shambhu J. Upadhyaya, H. Raghav Rao, and Raj Sharman

Knowledge has long been recognized as an essential prerequisite for quality decision making [9]. An individual’s knowledge can be transferred to others through different modes, such as socialization, externalization, combination, internalization—mechanisms that create and expand organizational knowledge [7]. Knowledge management (KM) can be viewed as a class of managerial processes that creates strategic value through knowledge creation, storage/retrieval, transfer, and application processes [7]. Knowledge management systems (KMS) are IT-based systems that can help organizations manage their knowledge by supporting those KM processes [1].

Is it possible to capture tacit and implicit knowledge that resides within individuals into an organizational knowledge base, and transfer the organizational knowledge to other members who may be separated by time and space? If so, how?

While some deep tacit knowledge may be extremely difficult to articulate, codify, and transfer, most knowledge exists on a continuum of tacitness, and transformation of implicit knowledge to explicit knowledge is, in many cases, a matter of effort to verbalize its terminology and rules [4].

Berners-Lee’s vision of the Semantic Web, where information flow is significantly enhanced by machine-processable metadata [2], envisages a new generation of KMS that can foster knowledge transfer, both implicitly and explicitly [8].

Semantics-enabled KMS (hereafter Semantic KMS) can allow multiple groups of knowledge engineers and users, within or across organizational boundaries, to build and share organizational knowledge [3].

Full article:

Fuente: https://www.amrita.edu/publication/secure-knowledge-management-and-the-semantic-web/

Imagen: https://www.ontotext.com/blog/the-semantic-web-20-years-later/

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