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The video-sharing social media platform TikTok has experienced a rapid rise in use since its release in 2016. While its popularity is undeniable, at the first glance, it seems to offer features already available on previously existing and well-established platforms such as Instagram, YouTube, and Facebook. To understand processes of self-making on TikTok, we undertake two methods of data collection: a walkthrough of the app and its surrounding environment, and 14 semistructured participant interviews. A qualitative analysis of this data finds three distinct themes emerge: (1) awareness of the algorithm, (2) content without context, and (3) self-creation across platforms. These results show that TikTok departs from existing platforms in the model of self-making it engenders, which we term “the algorithmized self”—a complication of the pre-existing “networked self” framework.
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Aparajita Bhandari
Sara Bimo
Social Media + Society
Cornell University
York University
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Bhandari et al. (Sat,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/698213dbe634e0f7f57fcf88 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/20563051221086241
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