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Social media - definition & links to sociality

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Notes from lecture on social media & summary of Chapters 2 & 3 from Christian Fuchs' "Social Media: A Critical Introduction". This includes discussion on what is social media, how it differs from other forms of digital media, the rise of Web 2.0, prosumers and participatory culture. It provides...

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  • April 9, 2021
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  • 2020/2021
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WK1 – What Is(n't) Social
Media?
Assign

Status Social Media

What is social media? – platform for sharing information, staying connected to
others, content creation and sharing; not one type of aesthetic but different
methods of information (text, image, video) and different platforms (with
specific functionality) meshed together
What isn't social media? – can be unclear what constitutes as social media and
what doesn't, because it's unclear what's common across software nominated
as 'social media'.

'mediation': social media is a practice by which we mediate our expression
and share with others –light travelling through air, similarly information is
translated through me

recontextualize information to take on a new context; often helps give
information in a form recognizable to other people

i.e. memes, they convey a specific bit of information that other people can
recognize and understand your intent with – but also the information loses
a part of itself, the image/video/text loses the context it had not on social
media

memes show social media is comparable to New Media Manovich), rather
than fine art and similar analogous modes of expression

develop own understanding/definition – maybe social media is more about
emotionality, particular human practices, etc.

Social media as Computer-mediated Communication CMC – "any human
symbolic text-based interaction conducted or facilitated through digitally-
based technologies" Spielberg)

Greiffenstern – CMC evolves with continuous arrival of new technologies;
new ways of expression, communication, and relation.




WK1  What Is(n't) Social Media? 1

, Forms of CMC Usenets, IRC, websites, email; social media has built on
these forms and extended the network and its capabilities; has made it
more intensely personal.

PROSUMER CULTURE

Social media – extension of Web 2.0, an interactive and engaging form of the
internet, user-generated content becoming the primary use of internet.

Web 2.0 – O'Reilly; signifies transition from early web; signified by arrival of
new tools, which are seen as extension of older tools rather than
completely new additions.

User-generated content popularized; rise of prosumer culture – consumers
both produce and consume content. Rise of grassroots reporting - stories not
highlighted traditional media can go viral.

Decentering the news, "cult of the amateur"

Grassroots reporting critique: it can show disinterest in bigger picture of
event and rather small-scale illustrations of personal frustrations
surrounding the issue

Generational divide in prosumers and consumers: younger generations are
more likely to be the former. The nature of social media as a social network
constitutes this – younger gen is used to connecting through digital means.

BIAS & PERSONALITY
Connection to known people creates a desire to trust the information coming
from those sources without seeking to test its bias or analyse it more critically
because we innately trust the sources.

Social networks allow to:

 construct a public/semi-public profile within a bounded system

 narrow a list of users to share connection with

We mediate our thoughts within a system and share them with other people.
Social networks as social management tools – i.e. social networks manipulated
for political needs; not only allowing virtual interactions, but transcending that
to social, becoming tangible/live.

As social management tools, different platforms vary in consideration of their
user base, features, functions/interaction styles, therefore the social




WK1  What Is(n't) Social Media? 2

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