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4chan and /b/: An Analysis of Anonymity and Ephemerality in a Large Online Community

4chan and /b/: An Analysis of Anonymity and Ephemerality in a Large Online Community
4chan and /b/: An Analysis of Anonymity and Ephemerality in a Large Online Community
We present two studies of online ephemerality and anonymity based on the popular discussion board /b/ at 4chan.org: a website with over 7 million users that plays an influential role in Internet culture. Although researchers and practitioners often assume that user identity and data permanence are central tools in the design of online communities, we explore how /b/ succeeds despite being almost entirely anonymous and extremely ephemeral. We begin by describing /b/ and performing a content analysis that suggests the community is dominated by playful exchanges of images and links. Our first study uses a large dataset of more than five million posts to quantify ephemerality in /b/. We find that most threads spend just five seconds on the first page and less than five minutes on the site before expiring. Our second study is an analysis of identity signals on 4chan, finding that over 90% of posts are made by fully anonymous users, with other identity signals adopted and discarded at will. We describe alternative mechanisms that /b/ participants use to establish status and frame their interactions
Bernstein, Michael
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Monroy-Hernández, Andrés
6778e8f0-aa54-49f2-bba2-f42daad24a40
Harry, Drew
730a490f-9906-43fa-be40-ab49b83bd638
André, Paul
be9fe144-3cf4-4aaf-9ddd-c37776b00831
Panovich, Katrina
232ea997-b25e-464e-b781-9eea3c5ae28b
Vargas, Greg
57ec031f-4fcc-41f4-a6b4-219a7690bd90
Bernstein, Michael
151e732c-ccc0-4c9b-9cf5-f6173588a808
Monroy-Hernández, Andrés
6778e8f0-aa54-49f2-bba2-f42daad24a40
Harry, Drew
730a490f-9906-43fa-be40-ab49b83bd638
André, Paul
be9fe144-3cf4-4aaf-9ddd-c37776b00831
Panovich, Katrina
232ea997-b25e-464e-b781-9eea3c5ae28b
Vargas, Greg
57ec031f-4fcc-41f4-a6b4-219a7690bd90

Bernstein, Michael, Monroy-Hernández, Andrés, Harry, Drew, André, Paul, Panovich, Katrina and Vargas, Greg (2011) 4chan and /b/: An Analysis of Anonymity and Ephemerality in a Large Online Community. ICWSM 2011.

Record type: Conference or Workshop Item (Paper)

Abstract

We present two studies of online ephemerality and anonymity based on the popular discussion board /b/ at 4chan.org: a website with over 7 million users that plays an influential role in Internet culture. Although researchers and practitioners often assume that user identity and data permanence are central tools in the design of online communities, we explore how /b/ succeeds despite being almost entirely anonymous and extremely ephemeral. We begin by describing /b/ and performing a content analysis that suggests the community is dominated by playful exchanges of images and links. Our first study uses a large dataset of more than five million posts to quantify ephemerality in /b/. We find that most threads spend just five seconds on the first page and less than five minutes on the site before expiring. Our second study is an analysis of identity signals on 4chan, finding that over 90% of posts are made by fully anonymous users, with other identity signals adopted and discarded at will. We describe alternative mechanisms that /b/ participants use to establish status and frame their interactions

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More information

Published date: June 2011
Venue - Dates: ICWSM 2011, 2011-06-01
Organisations: Agents, Interactions & Complexity

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 272345
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/272345
PURE UUID: d37378f2-6524-4e09-b8cd-be73d56c2c7c

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Date deposited: 25 May 2011 14:20
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 09:59

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Contributors

Author: Michael Bernstein
Author: Andrés Monroy-Hernández
Author: Drew Harry
Author: Paul André
Author: Katrina Panovich
Author: Greg Vargas

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