2007
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijhcs.2006.08.009
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Mining communities and their relationships in blogs: A study of online hate groups

Abstract: Blogs, often treated as the equivalence of online personal diaries, have become one of the fastest growing types of Web-based media. Everyone is free to express their opinions and emotions very easily through blogs. In the blogosphere, many communities have emerged, which include hate groups and racists that are trying to share their ideology, express their views, or recruit new group members. It is important to analyze these virtual communities, defined based on membership and subscription linkages, in order … Show more

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Cited by 246 publications
(140 citation statements)
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“…This means that quite a few sites discussed here are now defunct. When I started my study in 2007, research by Chau and Xu (2007) (Franklin 2010). A silver lining resulting from the Charlottesville tragedy mentioned above is that many Internet service providers and web-hosting companies that were once friendly to racial propaganda-one example of acting in an irresponsible akrasian way-have now ousted websites associated with white supremacism and neo-Nazism from their servers (Associated Press 2017).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This means that quite a few sites discussed here are now defunct. When I started my study in 2007, research by Chau and Xu (2007) (Franklin 2010). A silver lining resulting from the Charlottesville tragedy mentioned above is that many Internet service providers and web-hosting companies that were once friendly to racial propaganda-one example of acting in an irresponsible akrasian way-have now ousted websites associated with white supremacism and neo-Nazism from their servers (Associated Press 2017).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…An early research focus in this area was on 'flaming' or the deliberate use of hostile textual communication (e.g., aggressive language, negative comments) and specific linguistic formats (e.g., mixed of fonts, capitalisation, colours) to express hostility 2,14 , Spears, Postmes, Lea and Wolbert 15 found that anonymity in online interactions led to more flaming incidents than F2F communication. Flaming and aggressive communications have been identified as common behaviours in a variety of online environments (e.g., YouTube, gaming sites) 16,17,18 . This is consistent with research suggesting that lack of F2F interaction and perceived anonymity in the online environment encourages young people to behave in ways that would not be acceptable offline (e.g., harassment, bullying) 19,20 .…”
Section: Anonymity and Disinhibitionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Persons high in degree centrality can act as opinion leaders within a network. They in fact often play an important role when share information, influencing others or bridging different communities (Chau & Xu, 2005).…”
Section: Network Centralitymentioning
confidence: 99%