Democracy in the Digital Age: Challenges to Political Life in Cyberspace
Democracy in the Digital Age: Challenges to Political Life in Cyberspace
BT Technology Journal
Conversations in the Blogosphere: An Analysis "From the Bottom Up"
HICSS '05 Proceedings of the Proceedings of the 38th Annual Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences (HICSS'05) - Track 4 - Volume 04
The political blogosphere and the 2004 U.S. election: divided they blog
Proceedings of the 3rd international workshop on Link discovery
A face(book) in the crowd: social Searching vs. social browsing
CSCW '06 Proceedings of the 2006 20th anniversary conference on Computer supported cooperative work
Off the wall political discourse: Facebook use in the 2008 U.S. presidential election
Information Polity - Government 2.0: Making Connections between citizens, data and government
Brewing up citizen engagement: the coffee party on facebook
Proceedings of the 5th International Conference on Communities and Technologies
Political dialog evolution in a social network
Proceedings of the 13th Annual International Conference on Digital Government Research
Measuring media-based social interactions in online civicmobilization against corruption in Brazil
Proceedings of the 18th Brazilian symposium on Multimedia and the web
Media-based social interaction patterns: a case study in an online civic mobilization
Proceedings of the 2012 international workshop on Socially-aware multimedia
The influence of social networking sites on participation in the 2012 presidential election
OCSC'13 Proceedings of the 5th international conference on Online Communities and Social Computing
Proceedings of the 17th ACM conference on Computer supported cooperative work & social computing
Information Polity - Key Factors and Processes for Digital Government Success
Hi-index | 0.00 |
This paper examines the linkage patterns of people who posted links on the Facebook "walls" of Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton, and John McCain over two years prior to the 2008 U.S. Presidential election. Linkage patterns indicate the destinations to which participants in these social networking dialogues wished to send other participants. We show a strong integration of the Web 2.0 and new media technologies of social networking, online video, and blogs. Outside of video content, users tended to direct others to groups and applications within the Facebook community, but this homophilous behavior was more common for infrequent posters. Ten internet domains accounted for 90% of all links, and the top ten contained a mixture of news, candidate, and blog sites. We offer a discussion of the Facebook candidate walls as a public sphere for political discourse and introduce some design concepts for visualizing and navigating the walls.