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Distributed Commentspaces Carolin Gerlitz & Anne Helmond.

Date post: 06-Jan-2018
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Method_ 1. Take five different types of issues: 1. Politics: “Afghanistan war” 2. Entertainment: “Lady Gaga” 3. Economics: “Oil spill” 4. Social: “Ground Zero mosque” 5. Science & Technology: "Net-neutrality" 2. Batch query Google for issues with the Google scraper (top 100 results) 3. Get shares/comments/likes for all URLs on Facebook (through API) 4. Get all tweets for URL on Twitter through Topsy tool 5. Manually check all URLs to see if they allow comments > If so, get number of comments
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Distributed Commentspaces Carolin Gerlitz & Anne Helmond
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Page 1: Distributed Commentspaces Carolin Gerlitz & Anne Helmond.

Distributed Commentspaces

Carolin Gerlitz & Anne Helmond

Page 2: Distributed Commentspaces Carolin Gerlitz & Anne Helmond.

Questions_

1.How are commentspaces distributed across different platforms? 2.If a website does not allow for comments, does the commentspace migrate elsewhere?3.How are different types of issues and different types of commentspaces?

Page 3: Distributed Commentspaces Carolin Gerlitz & Anne Helmond.

Method_1. Take five different types of issues:

1.Politics: “Afghanistan war”2.Entertainment: “Lady Gaga”3.Economics: “Oil spill”4.Social: “Ground Zero mosque”5.Science & Technology: "Net-neutrality"

2. Batch query Google for issues with the Google scraper (top 100 results)

3. Get shares/comments/likes for all URLs on Facebook (through API)

4. Get all tweets for URL on Twitter through Topsy tool

5. Manually check all URLs to see if they allow comments > If so, get number of comments

Page 4: Distributed Commentspaces Carolin Gerlitz & Anne Helmond.
Page 5: Distributed Commentspaces Carolin Gerlitz & Anne Helmond.

Findings_

1.The possibility to comment does not correspond with the amount of comments.2.The amount of comments relates to the issue.3.In the case of Lady Gaga only 30% of the websites allow comments but it is the most actively commented issue.

Page 6: Distributed Commentspaces Carolin Gerlitz & Anne Helmond.
Page 7: Distributed Commentspaces Carolin Gerlitz & Anne Helmond.

Findings_

1.The comment activity inside the enabled commentspace of “Oil Spill” is bigger than in the other spaces.2.The activity on Twitter accounts for less than 5% of both inside and outside the enabled commentspace.3.Overall comment activity is slightly bigger within enabled commentspace.

Page 8: Distributed Commentspaces Carolin Gerlitz & Anne Helmond.
Page 9: Distributed Commentspaces Carolin Gerlitz & Anne Helmond.

Findings_

1.The comment activity outside the enabled commentspace of “Afghanistan War” is much bigger than inside the enabled commentspace.2.Comments mainly migrate to Facebook.3.Overall comment activity is bigger outside of the enabled commentspace.

Page 10: Distributed Commentspaces Carolin Gerlitz & Anne Helmond.
Page 11: Distributed Commentspaces Carolin Gerlitz & Anne Helmond.

Findings_

1.The comment activity both inside and outside the enabled commentspace of “Net-neutrality” is almost equal to the enabled commentspace.2.Compared to the other issues Twitter is relatively strong.3.“Net-neutrality” has equally distributed commentspaces.

Page 12: Distributed Commentspaces Carolin Gerlitz & Anne Helmond.
Page 13: Distributed Commentspaces Carolin Gerlitz & Anne Helmond.

Findings_

1.There is more comment activity within the enabled commentspace.2.The activity on Twitter accounts for less than 10% of both inside and outside the enabled commentspace.3.Compared to the other issues “Ground Zero Mosque” is heavily discussed in Facebook comments.

Page 14: Distributed Commentspaces Carolin Gerlitz & Anne Helmond.
Page 15: Distributed Commentspaces Carolin Gerlitz & Anne Helmond.

Findings_

1.Even though few websites allow for commenting, the comment activity inside the enabled commentspace is about 50x higher.2.Twitter is significantly less active than the other commentspaces.3.YouTube, MySpace and Daily Motion account for the big number of Facebook Shares and Facebook Comments.

Page 16: Distributed Commentspaces Carolin Gerlitz & Anne Helmond.

Unexpected findings_1.Twitter is not the most prominent commentspace, instead Facebook Comments/Shares are most active.2.In the absence of a commentspace, comments do not necessarily migrate to other spaces.3.Rather, the websites that allow for commenting also generate many distributed comments.4.The distribution of comments across spaces is very much related to the issue.

Page 17: Distributed Commentspaces Carolin Gerlitz & Anne Helmond.

Distributed Commentspaces

Carolin Gerlitz & Anne Helmond

[email protected] & [email protected]

Digital Methods Initiative, Summerschool 2010


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