Digital Discourse Database

Number of Posts: 120
Posts 51 - 60

How YouTube and Niconico fuel online fan culture in Japan

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Newspaper | The Guardian
Date | 21.4.2016
Language | English
Country | UK
Topic Tags | social media, YouTube
Summary | In Japan, video platforms such as YouTube and Niconico are very popular. The world’s fourth-largest internet population is in Japan, and Japanese users spend more time on video platforms than on social media platforms. The reason why Japanese people spend more time on video platforms is because they have been able to mould those video platforms to their own cultural norms (unlike social networks such as Facebook). Music streaming services have yet to reach Japan; physical CDs are still popular over there.
Image Description | Photograph of a Japanese girl holding a plate, video of Ariana Grande feat. Hikakin, and video about Izakaya (Japanese bar)
Image Tags | female(s), male(s), YouTube

How Facebook plans to take over the world

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Newspaper | The Guardian
Date | 23.4.2016
Language | English
Country | UK
Topic Tags | artificial intelligence, Facebook, virtual reality
Summary | Facebook has been constantly evolving to adapting to current trends. The first stage was "personal"; people would share their thoughts and status. The second stage was pictures, and now it's "instant articles". Facebook has a great capacity for transformation. Facebook also tried to be a news industry, and also set its sights on services such as bookmarking, 360-degree video, customer service robots, payments and virtual reality. Facebook's stage 4 is live video, and stages 5 and 6 might be artificial intelligence and virtual reality.
Image Description | Four photographs of Mark Zuckerberg at conferences, and photograph of attendees at a conference
Image Tags | female(s), male(s)

Please, Facebook, don't make me speak to your awful chatbots

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Newspaper | The Guardian
Date | 29.4.2016
Language | English
Country | UK
Topic Tags | artificial intelligence, Facebook, threat
Summary | Chatbots are the future! Soon, you'll be able to do everything thanks to chatbots (e.g. order a pizza, schedule a meeting). With Facebook, the idea is to introduce third-party bots into Messenger. Existing chatbots are not perfect yet; they are still slow and don't always understand everything. Facebook's goal is to create something flawless, a platform for your phone where you'll be able to book a table, pay a bill, order a cab, check the weather, and manage your relationships.
Image Description | Photograph of Mark Zuckerberg speaking in front of a giant screen displaying the Messenger platform, photograph of engineer Charles Lawson lighting a robot's cigarette, screenshot of a tweet, photograph of a smartphone screen displaying WeChat.
Image Tags | male(s), smartphone, text, Twitter

Jeremy Corbyn on Snapchat: where are the lols, Jezza?

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Newspaper | The Guardian
Date | 10.5.2016
Language | English
Country | UK
Topic Tags | politics, Snapchat
Summary | Jeremy Corbyn has been using Snapchat for his campaign, but so far he's mostly been using the same old campaign trail images. In order to win the young vote, he could be doing a lot more. Also, Snapchat shouldn't be used for formality.
Image Description | Collage of 6 of Corbyn's snaps, and screenshot of one of his "dull" snaps displaying a bus emoji
Image Tags | emojis, male(s), Snapchat

Headscarf emojis not an option – but teenage girl fixes that

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Newspaper | The Guardian
Date | 14.9.2016
Language | English
Country | UK
Topic Tags | diversity, emojis
Summary | Rayouf Alhumedhi is a 15-year-old teenage girl who lives in Germany. After noticing that there was no hijab emoji to represent Muslim women, she sent a proposal to Unicode. When she was asked why she wears a headscarf, she said that she actually feels liberated; she can choose what she wants to cover, and this way people see her past her beauty and for her knowledge.
Image Description | Five emojis representing different options for the "headscarf emoji"
Image Tags | emojis, female(s)

The rise and rise of international diplomacy by WhatsApp

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Newspaper | The Guardian
Date | 4.11.2016
Language | English
Country | UK
Topic Tags | politics, privacy, texting, WhatsApp
Summary | WhatsApp diplomacy is a thing: when leaders gather to talk in the same room, they can exchange emojis and other documents to other people without the whole room knowing. WhatsApp is more secure than other government information systems and has been used at the UN and EU headquarters.
Image Description | Photograph of a group of diplomats looking at their phone, screenshot of a WhatsApp chat, photograph of a man holding a phone and a woman standing next to him (both are looking at the phone)
Image Tags | female(s), male(s), smartphone, text, WhatsApp

Apple unfurls more millennial-friendly texting tools including 'emoji prediction'

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Newspaper | The Guardian
Date | 14.6.2016
Language | English
Country | UK
Topic Tags | artificial intelligence, emojis, privacy
Summary | Apple talked about the latest updates/developements concerning its products at its annual developer conference in San Francisco. For instance, they talked about the possibility for iPhone users to add larger emojis or emojify their texts. They also discussed the use of digital assistants and AI, and privacy features.
Image Description | N/A

The Emojibator: how a euphemistic fruit became an actual sex toy

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Newspaper | The Guardian
Date | 27.10.2016
Language | English
Country | UK
Topic Tags | emojis
Summary | Jaime Jandler created the emojibator, a sextoy shaped like an eggplant. The emojibator is an homage to the eggplant emojis, which has been used as a representation of a penis.
Image Description | N/A

Stuck on smileys: the role of emojis in business

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Newspaper | The Guardian
Date | 20.7.2016
Language | English
Country | UK
Topic Tags | emojis, marketing
Summary | Emojis can help businesses communicate better. People can use emojis at work in informal situations. Google or eBay employees for instance use platforms such as WhatsApp or Google Messenger in order to make the sharing of information easier. Also, using emojis with colleague on the same level can help develop closer relationships. Finally, companies use emojis to communicate with their customers. Therefore, companies build brand awareness.
Image Description | N/A

So Google wants to make emojis for real women? Here are a few suggestions

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Newspaper | The Guardian
Date | 23.5.2016
Language | English
Country | UK
Topic Tags | emojis, gender
Summary | The available emojis are a little traditional and stereotypical. Google is now asking for more female emojis that reflect reality. The author of the article has a few suggestions regarding new female emojis (e.g. resting bitch face, mansplain strain, empowerment batteries, Netflix and chilled by my own inertia, menstruation magician, etc.)
Image Description | Images of 6 alternative female emojis
Image Tags | emojis, female(s)

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