Post election the trolls who frequented the social media site/group Australian Federal Government | A Forum for your say have either disappeared into troll limbo or seemingly replaced by the usual and once again steady flow of, and as far as I can tell, the real life contributors. I'm not spreading rumour or conspiracy, however these blow ins into the virtual town square of Facebook and then the sudden and en masse disappearances of these citizens is alarming, especially when their emergence seems (by post and comment ratios) to coincide with the inactivity of otherwise regular, real life contributors. Like any good magic trick the subject vanishes into thin air, only to re-emerge somewhere else startling the audience, but if one looks closely the make-up and costume of the decoy isn't all that convincing- and their Facebook avatars seem to have a family type familiarity to them.
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| Source: Public domain |
Facebook via memes have been a great way throughout this federal election campaign for spreading policy points and party slogans or messages or themes with influence and the base of information- these are shared like wild-fire profile to profile- lucky they aren't viruses! Our respective political parties have gradually been spending more and more on internet or online advertising (we all saw those Youtube adverts which seemed to be a hundred times louder through the headphones than the audio of the clip we were originally hoping to watch).
We have greater access to the internet via mobile devices and wireless broadband than newspapers, however online or e-papers can include extra side-tab advertisements, so while it isn't food we are still consuming, and our appetites are growing, and why not tuck in especially when everybody wants to 'keep up with the Joneses' by the appearance of their timelines and numbers on their friends lists. A virtual table setting.
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| Food or filler? Source: Public domain |
-J
Patel, R. (2007). Stuffed and starved: The hidden battle for the world’s food system, Introduction.
Toronto, Canada: Harper Perennial


Hi Jack, I like the way you used taste and food to compare the Facebook "tastes" of the moment. I agree that the politicking is just a way to make the user feel somewhat smarter however their attention spans are short as they move on to the next political issue. Like Patel suggests, these trolls move on to the next political "food" source the same way we move on to the next corporate induced food.
ReplyDeletePatel, R. (2007). Stuffed and starved: The hidden battle for the world’s food system, Introduction (p.1).
Toronto, Canada: Harper Perennial