Abstract
While the debate rages on the role of social media technologies in the initial days of the Egyptian revolution of 2011, a more relevant research question today is the role of social media within an increasingly contested and turbulent political sphere. This article identifies three key modes by which social media is being exploited to impact political power, and uncovers the salience of each of these through 2 years of multisited ethnographies and interviews. First, I argue that political actors across the political spectrum, from liberals to Muslim Brotherhood (Ikhwan), are using technologies to build wider ranging, heterogeneous, and diverse networks of supporters, expanding their base from a more historically homogeneous core support group. Second, I argue that actors are working to build bridges between older and newer media platforms, recognizing that each platform is increasingly being shaped by the other. Finally, I describe some of the ways that technology is being used by activists to subvert their competition, promoting campaigns of misinformation and hacking at the expense of others.
Notes
This point invokes Eli Pariser's (2011) description of a filter bubble, as a system of personalized algorithms that determine and filter what one sees via one's social media feed. Instead of personalizing the world with what opinions he agrees with, in a recent plea at the TED 2011 conference he asked technologists to “give us some control” by also making possible the opportunity to view diverse, perhaps conflicting perspectives around a particular topic.