Divide and Share: Taxonomies, Orders and Masses in Facebook's Open Graph
Research output: Journal contributions › Journal articles › Research › peer-review
Standard
In: Computational Culture -a journal of software studies, No. 4, 09.11.2014.
Research output: Journal contributions › Journal articles › Research › peer-review
Harvard
APA
Vancouver
Bibtex
}
RIS
TY - JOUR
T1 - Divide and Share
T2 - Taxonomies, Orders and Masses in Facebook's Open Graph
AU - Kaldrack, Irina
AU - Röhle, Theo
PY - 2014/11/9
Y1 - 2014/11/9
N2 - The Open Graph protocol, introduced in 2010, has allowed Facebook to extend its reach far beyond the confines of the platform itself. It provides the basic technical infrastructure of connecting and sharing and encourages specific forms of analysis and usage. We argue that, if Facebook is to be conceptualized as a mass medium, the Open Graph is where media and masses mutually (re-)configure one another. In order to disentangle these relationships, we investigate backend and frontend practices from three different angles – descriptive, analytical and historical – and investigate how seemingly incompatible media promises converge.
AB - The Open Graph protocol, introduced in 2010, has allowed Facebook to extend its reach far beyond the confines of the platform itself. It provides the basic technical infrastructure of connecting and sharing and encourages specific forms of analysis and usage. We argue that, if Facebook is to be conceptualized as a mass medium, the Open Graph is where media and masses mutually (re-)configure one another. In order to disentangle these relationships, we investigate backend and frontend practices from three different angles – descriptive, analytical and historical – and investigate how seemingly incompatible media promises converge.
KW - Digital media
M3 - Journal articles
JO - Computational Culture -a journal of software studies
JF - Computational Culture -a journal of software studies
SN - 2047-2390
IS - 4
ER -