La Revista Icono 14 (Jul 2017)
Hashtags 2.0 - An Annotated History of the Hashtag and a Window to its Future
Abstract
Hashtags are an example of a Folksonomy, a term coined by Van der Val in 2004 to designate any label (or “tag”) that helps in the process of indexing and retrieval of online content. That said, the hash (#) symbol has a long heritage throughout the computer age. This paper makes an attempt to trace that history, since the hash was first used as a technology aid and towards its emergence as a new construct, the hashtag. It was first proposed openly by Chris Messina as simple means to “form groups” on Twitter, mirroring, in some ways, the way in which the # symbol was used on IRC (Internet Relay Chat) to designate “channels” themselves associated to specific topics and content exchange. The San Diego bushfires of October 2007 lead to an organic growth in the adoption of hashtags, growth that has not stopped since, making them ubiquitous in the current Internet age. Be as it may, the popularity of the hashtag made it also a vehicle to understand how information flows. Consequently, there is an incredibly rich literature explaining the mechanics of diffusion through social networks, opening, in the process, a new question: is that all for the hashtag? That’s a question we also attempt to answer by introducing a new construct: the “programmable hashtag” (or p#).
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