Crowdsourcing Transcriptions

Friday, May 23rd, 2008 | Jeanne Kramer-Smyth

The other idea I would love to talk about is the idea of distributed document transcription as I explain it in my blog post: Archival Transcriptions: for the public, by the public.  While I do love what reCaptcha does at the word level and Footnote.com does with locations, names and dates – I still think there is a place for a centralized web-based system where digitized documents can be uploaded and then transcribed & verified by volunteers. I think this would be especially powerful for smaller archives.

I would love to hash out this idea with others as well as learn what other projects like this might already exist.

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6 Responses to “Crowdsourcing Transcriptions”

  1. Ben Brumfield Says:

    The entire reason I’m going to THATCamp is to get feedback on my software for collaborative manuscript transcription. Adam and I are planning to do a joint session at which we demo our alphas. If you can’t make that, perhaps we could get together outside that?

  2. Jeanne Kramer-Smyth Says:

    I look forward to seeing your demo!

  3. Matthew MacArthur Says:

    Are you aware of the LDS church site for transcription of genealogical records? www.familysearchindexing.org

  4. Early Modern Notes » Interactive digital history Says:

    […] Crowdsourcing transcriptions […]

  5. THATCamp 2008: Crowdsourced Transcription and Collaborative Annotation - SpellboundBlog.com - spellbound by archival science and information technology in the digital age Says:

    […] ‘Crowdsourcing’ on the schedule was actually aimed at discussing the intersection of crowdsourced transcription and collaborative annotation. The group was small – just six of us and Ben Brumfield got us going […]

  6. Liste non exhaustive des thématiques abordées lors des THATCamp | ThatCamp Paris 2010 Says:

    […] thatcamp.org/2008/05/crowdsourcing-transcriptions/ […]