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Social Media: A Critical Introduction

TLDR
In this article, Fuchs provides the essential text for students of our new media world with social media changing how we use and understand everything from communication and the news to transport, more than ever it is essential to ask the right kinds of questions about the business and politics of social media.
Abstract
"Timely new chapters on China and the sharing economy of Uber and Airbnb strengthen an already vital contribution to communication studies. Through the lens of critical theory, Fuchs provides the essential text for students of our new media world." Vincent Mosco, Queens University, Ontario With social media changing how we use and understand everything from communication and the news to transport, more than ever it is essential to ask the right kinds of questions about the business and politics of social media. This book equips students with the critical thinking they need to understand the complexities and contradictions and make informed judgements. This Second Edition: Lays bare thestructures and power relations at the heart of our media landscape Explores thesharing economy of Uber and Airbnbin a brand new chapter Takes us into thepolitics and economy of social media in China Puts forward powerful arguments for how to achieve a social media that serves the purposes of a just and fair world This book is the essential, critical guide for all students of media studies and sociology. Readers will never look at social media the same way again.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Detection and Resolution of Rumours in Social Media: A Survey

TL;DR: The authors provide an overview of research into social media rumours with the ultimate goal of developing a rumour classification system that consists of four components: rumour detection, rumor tracking, rumour stance classification, and rumour veracity classification.
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News Sharing in Social Media: A Review of Current Research on News Sharing Users, Content, and Networks

TL;DR: Three central areas of research—news sharing users, content, and networks—were identified and systematically reviewed and used to provide a critical diagnosis of current research and suggestions on how to move forward in news sharing research.
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Creating the Collective: Social Media, the Occupy Movement and Its Constitution as a Collective Actor*

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examine the process through which Occupy activists came to constitute themselves as a collective actor and the role of social media in this process, and discuss the communication processes through which the movement was drawing the boundaries with its environment, creating codes and foundational documents, as well as speaking in a collective voice.
Journal ArticleDOI

Health promotion in the digital era: a critical commentary

TL;DR: An overview of the types of digital technologies used for health promotion and the socio-political implications of such use is provided, and it is contended that many digitized health promotion strategies focus on individual responsibility for health and fail to recognize the social, cultural and political dimensions of digital technology use.
Journal ArticleDOI

What Is Digital Labour? What Is Digital Work? What’s their Difference? And Why Do These Questions Matter for Understanding Social Media?

TL;DR: The notion of alienated labour is grounded in a general model of the work process that is conceptualized based on a dialectic of subject and object in the economy that is presented in the form of a model.