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Snurb — Wednesday 25 September 2024 18:24

Actor Types in Telegram’s Ecology of Counterpublic Communities

Politics | ‘Fake News’ | Social Media | ECREA 2024 |

The next speakers in this ECREA 2024 session on Telegram are Lars Rinsdorf and Kathrin Müller, whose interest is in hyperpartisan, alternative, and conspiracist social media spheres. Telegram is a very attractive tool for the publics populating such spheres; it is a hybrid communication platform that is especially well suited to the interests of such publics.

What are the actor identities, communicative practices, and frames of relevance emerging in such (counter)publics? The project explored this through expert interviews pointing researches to relevant topics and channels; then examined some 50 such channels closely through qualitative analysis; gathered some 2,700 posts from …

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Snurb — Wednesday 25 September 2024 18:22

Telegram Conspiracy Theorists’ Understandings of Social Media Moderation Practices

Politics | ‘Fake News’ | Social Media | Facebook | ECREA 2024 |

The first full day at the ECREA 2024 conference begins for me with a panel on Telegram and politics. The first presenter is Corinna Peil, whose interest is in COVID-19 conspiracy narratives on Telegram. How do the people who disseminate such narratives understand content moderation interventions?

Content moderation is a fundamental service that social media platforms provide, but this also generates accusations of censorship; exactly how content moderation works is also a subject of (sometimes conspiracist) ‘folk theories’ about the power and practices of social media platforms, however. The pandemic heightened this further, as it pushed platforms to implement stronger …

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Snurb — Monday 16 September 2024 14:32

Facebook without the News: Link-Sharing Patterns during Meta's Australian and Canadian News Bans (ECREA 2024 / AANZCA 2024)

Politics | Government | Journalism | Industrial Journalism | ‘Fake News’ | 'Big Data' | Social Media | Facebook | Dynamics of Partisanship and Polarisation in Online Public Debate (ARC Laureate Fellowship) | Evaluating the Challenge of ‘Fake News’ and Other Malinformation (ARC Discovery) | AANZCA 2024 | ECREA 2024 |
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Snurb — Monday 16 September 2024 14:24

The Filter in Our (?) Heads: Digital Media and Polarisation (NRC 2024)

Politics | Government | Polarisation | Journalism | ‘Fake News’ | Social Media | Echo Chambers and Filter Bubbles | Social Media Network Mapping | Dynamics of Partisanship and Polarisation in Online Public Debate (ARC Laureate Fellowship) | Conferences |
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Snurb — Sunday 15 September 2024 18:18

Reflections on Australia's News Media Bargaining Code and Canada's C-18 Bill (CCIA 2024)

Politics | Government | Journalism | Industrial Journalism | Social Media | Facebook | QUT Digital Media Research Centre |
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Snurb — Sunday 15 September 2024 17:57

And Speaking of Social Media...

Politics | Government | Journalism | Industrial Journalism | Internet Technologies | Social Media | Facebook | Twitter | Streaming Media | QUT Digital Media Research Centre |

I’ve mentioned some of these already in my previous update, but wanted to collect them together again in a single post too: over the past few weeks I’ve had a burst of podcast engagements on a range of topics relating to social media. Some of these are also in connection with the new podcast series Read Them Sideways that my colleagues Sam Vilkins, Sebastian Svegaard, and Kate FitzGerald in the QUT Digital Media Research Centre have now kicked off – and you may want to subscribe to the whole series via Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or their RSS feed …

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Snurb — Thursday 12 September 2024 14:51

Reflections on Australia's News Media Bargaining Code and Canada's C-18 Bill

Politics | Government | Journalism | Industrial Journalism | Social Media | Facebook | QUT Digital Media Research Centre |

There’s rather a lot going on in Australian policy-making around social media, most of it thoroughly disconnected from evidence, scholarship, and sanity – and I’m sure I’ll have more to say on some of these developments in future posts, too. For the moment, though, here is an update on some ongoing work surrounding the renewed controversies about Australia’s ill-fated News Media Bargaining Code (NMBC), a thoroughly misshapen piece of legislation which sought to force major digital media platforms to hand over some of their revenue to cross-subsidise struggling commercial news media operators.

The inherent flaws in this approach led to …

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Snurb — Friday 19 July 2024 02:25

Combining Semiotics and Natural Language Processing for the Study of Communicative Phenomena

Polarisation | 'Big Data' | Social Media | SM&S 2024 |

The final speaker in this final Social Media & Society 2024 session is my QUT colleague Kate O’Connor Farfan, whose interest is in the use of semiotics in combination with Natural Language Processing (NLP) for the study of polarisation. NLP comes with a very diverse range of applications, variously examining superficial and structural aspects at differing levels of complexity.

Kate’s work is interested centrally in the structure of texts, and dependency parsing is a useful tool for this – but such analytical frameworks also substantially complicate the analysis: dependency parsing can show up some 40 or more relationships between words …

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Snurb — Friday 19 July 2024 01:24

How Have Platforms’ Terms of Service Evolved over Time?

Internet Technologies | Social Media | SM&S 2024 |

And the final session at this excellent Social Media & Society 2024 conference starts with Kaspar Beelen, Katherine Ireland, and Tim Samples, presenting a longitudinal analysis of changes to platform Terms of Use. How have such terms changed over time, and how might we quantify and visualise such change? Are such contracts more plastic – mutable – than other types of contract, and are there specific times when they changed substantially?

The overall corpus here contains Terms of Use for some 21 platforms, from 1999 to 2024; building this was challenging and required substantial work with the Wayback Machine and …

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Snurb — Thursday 18 July 2024 20:28

Ten Years of the #auspol Hashtag in Review

Politics | Elections | Government | Social Media | Twitter | SM&S 2024 |

And my own paper on ten years of the #auspol hashtag on Twitter is next at Social Media & Society 2024. Here are the slides:

The Twitter That Was: Reflections on Ten Years of #auspol from Axel Bruns
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Beyond Interaction Networks: An Introduction to Practice Mapping (ACSPRI 2024)

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Untangling the Furball: A Practice Mapping Approach to the Analysis of Multimodal Interactions in Social Networks (Social Media + Society)

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