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4 Geo. L. Tech. Rev. 399 (2019-2020)
How the Internet Created Multiple Publics

handle is hein.journals/gtltr4 and id is 421 raw text is: GEORGETOWN LAW TECHNOLOGY REVIEW

HOW THE INTERNET CREATED MULTIPLE
PUBLICS
Lam Thuy Vo*
CITE AS: 4 GEO. L. TECH. REV. 399 (2020)
TABLE OF CONTENTS
I.   IN TR O D U C T IO N  ................................................................................... 3 9 9
II.  INFORMATION SEGREGATION THROUGH ALGORITHMS....................... 400
III. ALGORITHMIC SELECTION AND DISTRIBUTION OF INFORMATION....... 402
IV. CONSTANTLY CONTEXTUALIZED INFORMATION AND POLITICALLY
PERFORMATIVE CONTENT CONSUMPTION ................................................... 408
V.   A SHIFT OF WHAT IS POLITICALLY ACCEPTABLE ............................... 410
I. INTRODUCTION
Political identification in the digital age has shifted online:
increasingly, people define their political identity in how they come together
around issues and news events on the social web.
We adopt online political identities in three major ways: through
shared consumption of information on social media platforms; through
participation in political movements through hashtags and around news
events; or through performance of our political identity via virtue signaling on
the Internet. From the alt-right to Bernie bros, online communities coalesce
around news articles and other information that allows them to express their
political affiliations through the content they read, react to, and share. And
through this consumption of similar information, they form little political
information universes often referred to as media ecosystems.
* Lam Thuy Vo is a senior reporter at BuzzFeed News where she digs into data to examine
how systems and policies affect individuals. She has an expertise in mining and analyzing
data from the social web and is currently a visiting researcher for the Technology and Social
Change Project at the Harvard Kennedy School's Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and
Public Policy. In 2019, she published a book, Mining Social Media, about her empirical
approach to examining data from the Internet with No Starch Press.
i See Carolyn E. Schmitt, 'Network Propaganda' Explored, HARVARD GAZETTE (Oct. 25,

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