(1) Social media is a pervasive fact of modern life; it’s in the air and in the water so of course it’s in protests, too.
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Replying to @grimmelm
(2) Leaderless networked organizations are highly adaptable in some ways, but frustratingly inflexible in others.
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Replying to @grimmelm
(3) The good news: social media help protesters leapfrog over logistical obstacles. The bad news: social media helps protesters leapfrog …
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Replying to @grimmelm
(4) Protests matter because they’re how social movements demonstrate other capacities: to control the narrative, the streets, and the ballot
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Replying to @grimmelm
(5) There are no easy answers when it comes to Internet platforms, except perhaps that they should hire more people with local knowledge.
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Replying to @grimmelm
(6) Censorship is denial of attention. Let me repeat. Censorship is denial of attention. Not silencing speakers but diverting listeners.
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Replying to @grimmelm
(7) The authoritarian media strategy is to thwart collective action. Often that means sowing confusion, distrust, and helplessness.
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Replying to @grimmelm
This is very kind thanks. Also, those are exactly my arguments. :-D
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Replying to @zeynep
Good. I was afraid i’d get something wrong in my summary and set myself up for a Marshall McLuhan-ing. :-)
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Hahaha that is the greatest scene, but it was a great review! Thank you!
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Replying to @zeynep
Thank you for writing something worth signal-boosting!
0 replies 0 retweets 2 likesThanks. Twitter will use this to make your timeline better. UndoUndo
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