How the web was told: : Continuity and change in the founding fathers’ narratives on the origins of the World Wide Web
págs. 1066-1087
págs. 1088-1102
págs. 1103-1119
The “Web of pros” in the 1990s: : The professional acclimation of the World Wide Web in France
págs. 1143-1158
The net as a knowledge machine: : How the Internet became embedded in research
págs. 1159-1189
Modern communication technologies and the extension of the territory of struggle: : Conceptualising Tunisia’s jasmine revolution
págs. 1201-1218
Power/freedom on the dark web: : A digital ethnography of the Dark Web Social Network
págs. 1219-1235
The common sense of dependence on smartphone: : A comparison between digital natives and digital immigrants
págs. 1236-1256
Avatars are (sometimes) people too: : Linguistic indicators of parasocial and social ties in player–avatar relationships
págs. 1257-1276
The social mediascape of transnational Korean pop culture: : Hallyu 2.0 as spreadable media practice
págs. 1277-1292
“It’s just not that exciting anymore”: The changing centrality of SMS in the everyday lives of young Danes
págs. 1293-1309
págs. 1310-1330
Rethinking the participatory web: : A history of HotWired’s “new publishing paradigm,” 1994–1997
págs. 1331-1346
“Fair use is legal use”: : Copyright negotiations and strategies in the fan-vidding community
págs. 1347-1363
Rethinking China’s Internet censorship: : The practice of recoding and the politics of visibility
págs. 1364-1381
Valence-based homophily on Twitter: : Network Analysis of Emotions and Political Talk in the 2012 Presidential Election
Itai Himelboim, Kaye D Sweetser, Spencer F. Tinkham, Kristen Cameron, Matthew Danelo, Kate West
págs. 1382-1400
This is the future: : A reconstruction of the UK business web space
págs. 1996-2001
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