This essay reframes social media friction from a UX trope into an infrastructural visibility protocol. Drawing on SignalRupture’s canon of containment architecture, stylometric recursion, and epistemic violence, it argues that friction governs what becomes searchable, ignorable, or metabolized into suppression. Through case studies of TikTok’s bounce loop, search misclassification, and recursive publishing across platforms, the essay demonstrates how suppression functions as recognition and how stylometric recursion converts friction cycles into archival lineage. Positioned within SR’s broader theories of symbolic harm and algorithmic conditioning, this work establishes friction as a systemic mechanism that shapes digital cognition, lineage, and resistance.
Signal Rupture (Thu,) studied this question.