Alex Goldman
Alex Goldman is a producer for On the Media. One time he got run over by a car.
4Chan, the website that spawned Rickrolling, LOLcats, Over 9000! and even Anonymous, has been around for the better part of a decade at this point. It makes you wonder, then, why it's taken so long for a study about the culture of the website and its broader influence on the web. Well wonder no more. Researchers from MIT and the University of Southampton have released a study on the anarchic message board that, according to Slate's Michael Agger, attempts to uncover a method behind the madness:
...there's a Darwinian struggle to make the best wisecrack, to tell the most disgusting story. It's not unlike a high-school cafeteria table. Knowing that all of the threads will disappear creates an incentive to contribute to and improve good threads. The best ones stay current, popular, fit. Michael Bernstein, one of the authors of the paper, explained the ecosystem this way: "Even a single dedicated person can't force a meme to spread on /b/; there's too much content and people will ignore it. The result is that if you want success (replies), you need to produce content that will grab people quickly, and encourage them to respond or remix it."
The lack of archives spurs the uploading of fresh images. It also has the secondary effect of forcing /b/ regulars to save their favorite threads on their own computers. They will often reintroduce memes onto /b/ after a few days or weeks, which generates further variations, remixes, or complete hijackings in a different direction. The need to save stuff also acts as a powerful "selection mechanism" that sees 4chan ephemera get posted in other places, or combined with other memes, like the fake Successories poster.
Personally, I am just a tiny bit ambivalent about having the process of meme selection at 4Chan demystified, but both Agger's article and the study itself make for compelling reading.
(via slate.com)
Comments [3]
I disagree with my colleagues. Even if 4Chan has reached its apex of importance and following it is still a sociological movement which is likely to be emulated in the future by other social networkers.
Understanding what the site was, why it attracted so many people and what the content that they were sharing is important media culture to be dissected.
http://michaelmaczesty.blogspot.com/2011/06/next-political-movement-web-party.html
all the attention given to 4chan now portrays it as what it was, not what it is. the truth about 4chan is that the more people who use it, the more diluted it becomes. it was becoming diluted & pointless in 2006!! today, what is 4chan anymore? honestly its nothing that it was in '04 '05 when it geniunely was something COMPLETELY new & utterly engrossing.
"too many people, too many posts, its completely incoherent". people have been saying this about 4chan since the beginning and 7 years later (not a decade?! as this misinformed MIT person says), 4chan has finally been diluted to the point that its lost what made it unique.
but hey, it became a phenomenon in mass culture. who would've guessed?!
bring back snacks!!
/b/ has been garbage for years. the only places where memes come from anymore is /v/ and /sp/. threads die within 10 minutes on the /b/ because everyone on there is 12 and from the uk or australia.
the original reason /b/ inculcated memes was most people knew how to photoshop (since they got banned or quit something awful) and create OC (original content). there is no darwinian battle of OC on /b/. the only darwinian battle is so-callled intellectuals DOIN IT WRONG.
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