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Because Internet: Understanding the New Rules of Language

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A linguistically informed look at how our digital world is transforming the English language.

Language is humanity's most spectacular open-source project, and the internet is making our language change faster and in more interesting ways than ever before. Internet conversations are structured by the shape of our apps and platforms, from the grammar of status updates to the protocols of comments and @replies. Linguistically inventive online communities spread new slang and jargon with dizzying speed. What's more, social media is a vast laboratory of unedited, unfiltered words where we can watch language evolve in real time.

Even the most absurd-looking slang has genuine patterns behind it. Internet linguist Gretchen McCulloch explores the deep forces that shape human language and influence the way we communicate with one another. She explains how your first social internet experience influences whether you prefer "LOL" or "lol," why ~sparkly tildes~ succeeded where centuries of proposals for irony punctuation had failed, what emoji have in common with physical gestures, and how the artfully disarrayed language of animal memes like lolcats and doggo made them more likely to spread.

Because Internet is essential reading for anyone who's ever puzzled over how to punctuate a text message or wondered where memes come from. It's the perfect book for understanding how the internet is changing the English language, why that's a good thing, and what our online interactions reveal about who we are.

327 pages, Hardcover

First published July 23, 2019

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About the author

Gretchen McCulloch

1 book518 followers
Gretchen McCulloch is an internet linguist!

She writes the Resident Linguist column at Wired (and formerly at The Toast). McCulloch has a master’s in linguistics from McGill University, runs the blog All Things Linguistic, and cohosts Lingthusiasm, a podcast that’s enthusiastic about linguistics. She lives in Montreal, but also on the internet.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 1,981 reviews
Profile Image for Sarah.
351 reviews185 followers
Read
August 22, 2019
But what I really want is a book that explain’s why nobody know’s how to use apostrophe’s anymore 😑
Profile Image for Mario the lone bookwolf.
805 reviews4,794 followers
June 7, 2020
Language developed very slow, ugh, ah, and is accelerating faster and faster. Hm, everything seems to do this nowadays. Take all those funny ancient, medieval, renaissance texts and how entertainingly cute they wrote, talked, and grammared, isn´t it lovely.
For a very long time the control over punctuation, grammar, spelling, was in the hand of the few ever so smart intellectuals that decided what was right and wrong, what a correct standard is and what an evil, wrong, stinking, different approach.

This lead to bizarre overcomplications, reforms that got reformed and so many unnecessary overachiever brain wars that wanted one right language and not an intelligent compromise like, let´s say, for instance, different alternatives to write something as long as the logic and intelligibility don´t suffer. But then the specialist would have had no jobs anymore, so the senseless learning for millions of kids continued.

And then, bang, internet. Not that the poor young ones didn´t have to learn stupid, illogical rules anymore ( I mean, what do they believe language is, math, physics or something?), but now language could start evolving quicker, freer, and more manifold than ever before, with each subgroup, culture, special interest, and it keeps accelerating, bazinga.

This fascinating concept, how language is changing and will develop in the future thanks to interconnecting anyone with all human beings and their knowledge and unique speech, use of language and speaking and writing style, is the main idea of McCullochs´ revolutionary work.

Yes, I know, there are emojis, memes, hashtags, emoticons, much viral stuff that will continue forever, but I find the transformation of the way people directly interact with each other in social media, chats, comments, VR, AR, and in some rare cases, real life, much more fascinating than ;) and grumpy cat. Sorry for that, but neologisms, new slangs, diminutives, and jargon and how they collide with and change the old language, as the digital natives keep using new grammar when they become parents themselves and the before mentioned, is much more fascinating than pics and evolving smileys. I have a certain mentality regarding emojis and I will stay with it, saying: “I´ll tip and tap them. With my cold, dead hands.“ But not before.

It´s all a bit of emancipation too, because, do you know what, in my subjective opinion, is the ultimate proof of conservative stupidity? Having tens of thousands of linguists in universities all around the world that play with the rules of languages and boring, useless studies about stuff nobody is interested in while important, new, interdisciplinary, progressive fields get no funding for research in this unbelievable revolution of everything regarding human interaction since the internet began. What right and legitimation have all those anachronism custodians to cherrypick and dictate how language has to evolve, when a reform is necessary, and how one has to do grammar, yada, blah blah, and babble? The language is free, wooden girls and boys, chill a bit, open your mind for more levity in language and ethical and cultural references.

But luckily internet linguistics is starting to take off and will analyse a parallel evolution of real and digital language, how stronger languages are cannibalizing others (those poor little ones like German that suffer so much with each anglicism killing one of their old friends, oh look, now it cries) and one has to always keep in mind that we will seem as strange to future people as medieval knights and Victorian ladies seem to us today.

Regarding emojis I asked myself how the biochemical and neurological effect of it will develop if VR and AR are used by kids in some years and they are conditioned to use animations and pictures of mimic, gestures, and body language that are written into their wetware and give conversations and thoughts an extra lawyer, linking different brain regions together and, sigh, being quite useful for human evolution. But not before!

And I still won´t use them, ok!? See, an oldfashioned interrogation and exclamation mark, that´s enough emo for me. And I lold and rofld when the author was talking about a „third place to socialize“ next to work and home, if my math is right, I am still at 0, socialize my …

What amazed me the most is realizing that this living, breathing, immortal thing called language is at the moment creating new generations of language users, that this love affair between tech and blah will last forever and create exponentially more and more different manifestations, that McCulloch already defined different phases and varieties of users, that I am one of the ancient ones and finally realized that I am getting old.

A wiki walk can be as refreshing to the mind as a walk through nature in this completely overrated real life outside books:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interne...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Socioli...
Profile Image for Jenna ❤ ❀  ❤.
866 reviews1,531 followers
October 9, 2019
I find the evolution of languages fascinating so as soon as I saw the cover/title of this book, I knew it was one I'd enjoy.  The author Gretchen McCulloch is a linguist who studies internet language.  In this book she shows us how English has transformed since and because of the internet.  She explores memes, hashtags, emoticons, and emojis, showing how we use them in place of gestures and facial expressions in our written online language.  Indeed, we communicate so much through non-verbal methods that our online language can be easily misinterpreted without it.  With the use of emojis and GIFs, we can better communicate our intent.  

Another way we enhance our digital communication is through selective punctuation.  I had no idea that using punctuation in texts is seen by young people as passive-aggressive; using a period at the end of a text, for instance, indicates annoyance.  What?????

KUWTK Keeping Up With The Kardashians GIF - KUWTK KeepingUpWithTheKardashians BruceJenner GIFs

It made me feel a little less ancient that I at some point began using the ellipsis to indicate something left unsaid and not as a line break as we did in antediluvian days.  Another way written language has evolved for me is in the use of the word "dear" as a greeting.  For those of you too young to remember, back in the day we would begin all correspondence with "Dear So-and-So". For everyone, whether we personally knew them or not.   Now it makes me uncomfortable when I receive an email from someone I don't know and they address me as Dear.  Ugh, shudder, no, no, no!  That just isn't right!   

I never noticed these changes taking place and only became aware of them through this book.  It is exciting to see how my own writing has changed with the internet (not capital I Internet) -- and where I am still clinging to formal written language.  I will confess that at times I am a grammar snob. Incorrect spellings, grammar, and punctuation drive me batty.  (It is different if I know the writer's mother tongue is not English; then it is understandable.)  I have to remind myself that language has always changed and that's ok (Okay); if it didn't, we would all still be babbling whatever syllables the first humans uttered.  As Ms. McCulloch says, "The changeability of language is its strength."  This book reminds me that language is in constant flux; that is its nature.  Anything that is alive changes.   Still, I don't know if I will ever accept the spelling of "alot" instead of "a lot" or the now common use of double negatives in English.   Am I just old???  

I am what Ms. McCulloch describes as an Old Internet Person, meaning one who began using the internet prior to the end of the 90s, not necessarily an old person (though of course our definition of "old" changes as we age.  I no longer think of people as old until they're in their 80s, whereas in my 20s I would have thought my now 44 year old self to be an antique relic of the distant past).  It was fun to reminisce with the author about such things as printing out emails, ICQ, listservs, and especially those chain emails (er, e-mails) of jokes -- ring a bell for anyone else??   Those we would ALWAYS print out so we could share them with everyone who wasn't on the internet -- which comprised just about everyone we knew in the "real world".  

Ms. McCulloch describes four waves of internet people, showing how our online language was shaped by when we began socializing online (it does not necessarily denote one's age).

• Usenet, forums, IRC, BBS, listservs  (these are the Old Internet people)
• AIM, MSN Messenger, blogs, LiveJournal, MySpace
• Facebook, Twitter, GChat, YouTube
• Instagram, Snapchat, iMessage, WhatsApp

It's interesting to note that some of us have kept the styles we first began using, and others of us have evolved with the times.  I would put myself in the middle.  In many ways I have changed but, as noted above, there are things that I adamant about not changing.

This book is fascinating although I did find it to be lacking in areas as well.   I would have enjoyed learning more about the new words that have entered English because of the internet, and especially to see how communicating with those who speak other languages has enriched English with "foreign" words.  All in all, a fun and interesting read for anyone who's interested in seeing our evolving ways of communicating with each other.

(My apologies to any octogenarians who read this and are offended that I think you're old. Check back with me in another 10 years and I'm sure I'll have moved my definition of "old" up another decade.)
Profile Image for Amanda.
272 reviews236 followers
May 1, 2019
The first book I've ever felt was written for ME: an Internet kid of a particular micro-generation, interested in examining my online life with as much respect and rigor as we apply to traditional literature and academic studies. I LOVED this book. I'll be buying copies for my dad, my little sister, and people of many ages in between.
Profile Image for Lois Bujold.
Author 196 books38.2k followers
May 1, 2022

Well. That was excellent. "Friendly, familiar, foreign, and near," as the tourist ads for Canada used to say, by turns informative and hilarious. The distinction between formal and informal writing seems endlessly useful. The chapter on emoji linguistically analyzed as gesture was certainly a lightbulb moment, for the author first, apparently.

This made an especially fascinating juxtaposition with Stolen Focus, which I just read. https://www.goodreads.com/review/show... Two very different slices through the same world. The contrast is probably highest in their separate examinations of What Those Teenagers Are Doing, McCulloch more insider and positive, Hari more outsider and negative. Makes me want to know their respective ages to track back through McCulloch's analysis of successive net-generations and the causes of their differences, though the authors are both clearly very net-savvy.

Very highly recommended.

Ta, L.

(I must give Hari credit. His book inspired me to knock three addictive time-wasting games off my tablet, which gave me the opened space and eye endurance to finally read this one. I'm still jonesing a bit for the games (though not for the horrible ads they were riddled with) which is enlightening.)
Profile Image for Mary.
32 reviews6 followers
July 31, 2019
I ended up being a little let down by this book. Maybe it was just that I was expecting something different. I was really hoping for more talk about current linguistics/language from the internet. It was heavily about the history of the internet, which definitely served a purpose and was necessary to understand the evolution of our language with the internet. But there seemed to be little actual discussion on the interesting linguistic aspects of the internet and more of a long history lesson. The author so many times made comments like "(more on memes in the next chapter)" and then never would really get to it in the following chapters. I felt there were so many interesting aspects of internet language usage that were sorely missing. When she used examples of current popular phrases or typography it was much more enjoyable - that's what I really would have liked to see more of. Things like "in my feels" "I can't even" "tldr" and memes - I would have loved to hear more expansion but was given more of a hard-to-follow, scattered and sometimes boring lesson on odd things that didn't seem to do with anything. I guess I am a little confused what the overarching purpose was. I still enjoyed quite a bit, but had to skim a lot to find the pieces that interested me.

I did learn some, and found certain parts really interesting and a few moments that made me chuckle. She did a good job explaining the reasoning behind certain language constructs and how they came to be. It was interesting to learn about Arabizi and the like. The typographical tone of voice chapter was particularly interesting to me. I guess I would have liked more regarding internet culture. Maybe it just wasn't what I was expecting.
Profile Image for donna backshall.
744 reviews205 followers
September 11, 2019
I was so excited to finally get this audiobook on loan from my library. I felt like I'd been waiting for months, which of course is a great sign. I love linguistics and this is a popular book, so I was expecting a good solid read.

Well, it's a weird book. Informative, yes, but also weird.

It's weird because McCulloch uses words like "wonderfully" and "innovative" to praise EVERY SINGLE CHANGE that has been made to communication in The Internet Age. Fine, I'm all for progress and optimism too, but her firm Everything Is Awesome stance sounded far too enthusiastic. It was almost like she was trying to convince herself while she was convincing us that emoticons, abbreviations, alternate spellings and adopted lingo are all absolutely an enhancement to our culture and communication, no matter what they add. She only talks about how great this evolution must be, and leaves no room for the ways some of these changes might not be so "wonderful". IMHO, it's not a full examination if all sides are not explored.

It's also weird because the audio version is read by the author, which is rarely a good thing and this case fits the rule. McCulloch reads the book at breakneck speed, while adding a dash of smugness. Seriously, I stopped my Overdrive app multiple times just to ensure the speed was still on 1x. Perhaps this is why a lot of Audible and Overdrive reviewers are stating they need to revisit this book later?

I did learn a bit from this book, but I couldn't finish because I dreaded coming back to that voice. I might see if the eBook is available through Overdrive, just to finish it out.
Profile Image for K.J. Charles.
Author 62 books9,974 followers
Read
May 18, 2020
Interesting analysis of how we speak and type on the internet, in terms of social and often age groupings and the different meanings applied. It is absolutely fascinating how we've collectively managed to develop a written language that conveys tone (as in meaning) for pretty much the first time in the history of language, even if the ways of doing it could be considered a bit ~special~. How much you enjoy this will depend on your appetite for linguistic nerdery. I wasn't that interested in the discussion of the tribes; I'd have liked more breakdown of the specifics (there's lots on sarcasm tildes, but I want analysis of eg Spongebob rAndOm CaPiTaLs or the deliberate omission of question marks in remarks such as "why are you like this"). I should chase up the author's blog, clearly.
Profile Image for NinjaMuse.
356 reviews33 followers
April 1, 2019
In brief: A linguist looks at the ways the internet has changed English, with digressions into internet culture as a whole.

Full disclosure: This was a reading copy which I received through work, with the expectation that I would like it enough to review it and then order it for stock. This book is out July 23, 2019.

Thoughts: This was a really interesting read, containing a lot of stuff I knew without knowing and also stuff I hadn’t thought about. It’s also a good, well-structured introduction to linguistics and specifically sociolinguistics—not as in depth as a textbook would be, but with compressed versions of the core ideas in accessible, modern language. I liked that McCulloch makes a point to not only lay out her reasoning as to why she focused on some linguistic features over others, but also to cite originators of memes and slang when possible.

As for the contents, they’re a little hard to sum up simply because there’s a lot of stuff covered. The evolution of internet culture and generational profiles of its users. The semantic uses of gifs and emojis. Twitter and Facebook as research tools. Minimalist Tumblr punctuation and the contentiousness of periods in texts. The history of memes. The informality of emails compared to letters. Emphatic letter duplication. Just for starters. Like I said, I knew a lot of the content just from living on the internet for so long, but it was nice having it verbalized and the sociology I largely did not know and it was very cool.

And while McCulloch doesn’t cover everything—the “because + noun phrase” formation doesn’t appear despite the title, for instance, and the spread of internet usages into spoken English is barely touched on—a lot of those gaps are things you could do a dissertation on and internet linguistics is a pretty new field, so I have hopes for either a follow-up or a book by somebody else. She definitely leaves things open and encouraging to anyone wanting to follow her lead. (Doing linguistics research and stumped for ideas? Hit me up. I have thoughts.)

So yeah, definitely a good book and very much written for me the internet goblin linguistics nerd. Anyone who’s interested in language, the internet, understanding what the heck is up with kids these days, and/or the social history of our times should add this to their TBR.

8/10

To bear in mind: Will challenge your ideas about language and the internet, unless you’re a linguist already. If you’re already a linguist, will give you at least ten ideas for research papers. Might also give you flashbacks to the 1990s, regardless of educational leanings.
Profile Image for Rebecca.
3,834 reviews3,164 followers
December 20, 2019
I’m surprised by how fascinating I found this: I’m a late adopter when it comes to technology (I’m still resisting a smartphone) and I haven’t given linguistics a thought since that one class I took in college, but it turns out that my proofreader’s interest in the English language and my daily use of e-mail and social media were enough to make it extremely relevant. The Montreal linguist’s thesis is that the Internet popularized informal writing and quickly incorporates changes in slang and cultural references. At the same time, it still reflects regional and age-specific differences in the way that people speak (write conversationally).

The book goes deep into topics you may never have considered, like how we convey tone of voice through what we type and how emoji function as the gestures of the written word. You’ll get a breakdown of current generations in terms of when the Internet became the default in their life (I belong to what the author calls “Semi Internet People”: I remember first using the Internet in a classroom in seventh grade, getting dial-up AOL at home not long thereafter, and opening my own Hotmail account in high school), a history of lolcats, and musings on the metaphorical use of periods and capital letters. If you are among the unconvinced, you’ll also be schooled in the appeal of gifs and memes.

Some trivia I picked up:
In 2015 the tears of joy emoji became the most popular emoji, more used than the smiley-face emoticon.

For many of us the Internet serves as what sociologists call a “third place” besides home and work where we can socialize.

Only 5–8% of Internet users are bloggers.

“Subtweeting” (as in subliminal) and “vaguebooking” are when you post about a situation without giving any specifics.

Parents often refer to a child by an initial or nickname so the child won’t have a searchable social media presence.

The Library of Congress now archives memes (The Lolcat Bible, Urban Dictionary, etc.).

McCulloch portrays language as a constantly changing network, such that terms like “standard” and “correct” no longer apply. She writes with such geeky enthusiasm that you’ll happily accompany her down any linguistic alley.

Originally published on my blog, Bookish Beck.
Profile Image for Mara.
1,793 reviews4,124 followers
February 13, 2020
What can I say-- nerdy books about language are my thing :). This was a really insightful analysis of how internet communications have evolved over time. The highlights for me were her dissection of different "generations" of internet users (e.g. "old internet" vs. "full internet," etc.), as well as the emoji chapter. This is one of the books that ends up having a lot of descriptive power, and I appreciated how it made me more aware of why I talk the way I do online
Profile Image for Wanda Pedersen.
2,035 reviews426 followers
January 28, 2020
I found this author’s joy in her research to be contagious. She obviously loves linguistics and her interactions on the internet. In these days when there is so much contention and negativity on the interwebz, this is great to read.

As she points out, the use of slang presupposes that the writer knows the correct usage that they are deviating from and therefore is enjoying the process. And there have been panics about telephone use, among other technologies. Language evolves and someday in the not too distant future, people will look back at the situation today the way we look back at WWII terms entering the lexicon.

I loved how she traced the origins of certain internetisms or ways of expressing oneself, treating them as issues worthy of research. I also found her classification of people interesting, as I’m a Post Internet Person (I didn’t really engage in the world of the internet until after such sites as Facebook became things). My horizons were certainly expanded as I learned about facets of the net that I wasn’t aware of before.

If you are a closet linguistic like myself and you enjoy your playtime on the internet, you may find this book to be quite entertaining.
February 15, 2021
Whatever else is changing for good or for bad in the world, the evolution of language is neither the solution to all of our problems nor the cause of them. It simply is.

Linguist Gretchen McCulloch has a non-judgemental and highly enthused view of how writing on the internet has evolved and how it can be interpreted, misunderstood and be exclusionary. Because Internet reads like a multi-disciplinary approach from both cultural anthropologist and social historians' forays into the wilds of the English-writing internet users. Her chapter on Internet People was fascinating as she described five groups based not only when they began to use the internet but on their underlying attitudes towards it in terms of its relevance to their social selves. These groups range from the first wave "Old Internet People," whose knowledge of programming enabled internet access, to the third wave "Post Internet People," who have never known a reality without the internet.

Language use, however, is not so cleanly divided by these classifications. The differences in their perspectives can lead to misunderstandings among these groups when they communicate. A historical look at "LOL" and "lol" illustrates this. One group from the second wave writes "LOL" to communicate not only its original definition of "laughing out loud" but general amusement. In contrast, at least two other groups use "lol" to convey a broader range of emotions from laughter to ironic pseudo amusement to passive aggression.

The author also explained the subtleties of internet punctuation, the rise of emoji, and memes. The chapter on memes felt weaker in comparison with the rest of the book because I really liked the emoji and typographical tone of voice sections. Who knew that the period punctuation mark could convey passive aggressiveness? McCulloch's underlying theme or ambition for her book became evident here.
Perfectly following a list of punctuation rules may grant me some kinds of power, but it won't grant me love. Love emerges ... when we pay attention to each other and care about the effect we have on each other. When we learn to write in ways that communicate our tone of voice, we learn to see writing ... as a way of listening to each other better. We learn not to write for power but for love.

This reminded me of a lesson I've never forgotten from my high school history teacher. When we assume things, we make an ass of u and me. More true than ever when we can't show our facial expressions and body language as we speak except through punctuation, emojis, and memes when we write on the internet.

I listened to the audio book as well as read the ebook. I don't recommend the audio book unless you've no other alternative because this topic requires visuals. The audio version is narrated by the author, and her tone can also come across as highly amused to a bit smug, which annoyed me.
Profile Image for Mehrsa.
2,235 reviews3,630 followers
August 3, 2019
Fascinating research about the evolution of online language and the differences between generations. I am not a digital native and so I always try to use good grammar in texts and tweets and I know that the cool young kids have a different way of interacting with it than I do. It was really nice to have the data to make sense of it. McCulloch has the coolest research agenda ever.
Profile Image for Niklas Pivic.
Author 3 books69 followers
September 19, 2019
This is as much a guide into the world of how living with internet—and all device-interconnected glories around it—has changed language and the ways in which we think, as it is a linguistic analysis into how language has become intertwined with internet.

An example of when digital communications can be analysed:

Even keysmash, that haphazard mashing of fingers against keyboard to signal a feeling so intense that you can’t even type real words, has patterns.

A typical keysmash might look like “asdljklgafdljk” or “asdfkfjas;dfI”—quite distinct from, say, a cat walking across the keyboard, which might look like “tfgggggggggggggggggggsxdzzzzzzzz.” Here’s a few patterns we can observe in keysmash:

• Almost always begins with “a”
• Often begins with “asdf”
• Other common subsequent characters are g, h, j, k, l, and ;, but less often in that order, and often alternating or repeating within this second group
• Frequently occurring characters are the “home row” of keys that the fingers are on in rest position, suggesting that keysmashers are also touch typists
• If any characters appear beyond the middle row, top-row characters (qwe . . .) are more common than bottom-row characters (zxc . . .)
• Generally either all lowercase or all caps, and rarely contains numbers

Keysmashing may be shifting, though: I’ve noticed a second kind, which looks more like “gbghvjfbfghchc” than “asafjlskfjlskf,” from thumbs mashing against the middle of a smartphone keyboard.


If you don't think that analysis is enticing, don't worry, this book may still be for you.

McColloch writes passionately and knowingly about a lot, and she doesn't just flail away; the book is structured, and heads into matters chronologically, not only showing how people have used "internet jargon" since decades, but also (naturally) how it's evolved.

I loved reading about how romanisation works in languages like the Arabic:

Although Arabizi was initially made necessary because computers didn’t support the Arabic alphabet, it’s now taken on a social dimension. A paper by David Palfreyman and Muhamed Al Khalil, analyzing chat conversations between students at an English-speaking university in the United Arab Emirates, gave an example of a cartoon that one student drew to represent other students in her class.

One student was labeled with the name “Sheikha,” using the official Romanization of the university. But the nickname version of the same name, which doesn’t have an officially sanctioned spelling, was written in the cartoon as “shwee5”—using Arabizi “5” to represent the same sound as the official “kh.”

It’s a hand-drawn cartoon: there’s no technological reason for either name to be written in the Latin alphabet. But at least for some people, it’s become cool: participants in the study commented that “we feel that only ppl of our age could understand such symbols” and that it makes “the word sound more like ‘Arabic’ pronunciation rather than English. For example, we would type the name (‘7awla) instead of (Khawla). It sounds more Arabic this way”).”


For natural and linguistic reasons, Twitter seems to be a perfect playground to analyse internet language in our age:

Jacob Eisenstein, the linguist who was Twitter-mapping “yinz” and “hella,” and his collaborator Umashanthi Pavalanathan at Georgia Tech decided to split up English tweets in a different way. Rather than look at location, language, or script, they looked at the difference between tweets about a particular topic, say the Oscars, versus tweets in conversation with another person.

They theorized that, just as in person we’d generally talk more formally when addressing a roomful of people than when talking one on one, we’re directing a tweet with a hashtag towards a large group of people. Our @mentions, on the other hand, are more informal, only noticed by a select few—and we adjust our language electronically the same way we do out loud.

Studies of people who tweet in other languages show a similar pattern. A Dutch study of people who tweet in both the locally dominant language, Dutch, and a local minority language, Frisian or Limburgish, found that tweets with hashtags were more likely to be written in Dutch, so as to reach a broader audience, but that users would often switch to a minority language when they were replying to someone else’s tweet. The inverse was less common: few people would start in a smaller language for the hashtagged tweet and switch to the larger language for the one-on-one reply.


There's a lot of brilliant parts about stuff like trying to handle irony—about which there are some magnificent and quite unbelievable notes—typography, markup language, youth, memes, cats (of course), doge, emblem gestures, and how long somebody pauses in language before the person they're talking to thinks something starts feeling weird.

This book is colourful, brilliant training, easy-going, and its author very knowledgeable. This book is very needed, perhaps especially for Old Internet People like myself. I recommend this to all who are interested in language and who gripe too much to know that language does, thankfully, evolve; learn how or devolve.
Profile Image for thefourthvine.
645 reviews222 followers
October 17, 2019
This was a lot of fun, but more in a nostalgia sense than a learning-things sense. I, apparently, am an Old Internet Person (and the daughter of an Old Internet Person; my father was online before I was, because he started out on arpanet), and unlike the Old Internet People described in the book, I’ve been trucking right along through most social media platforms and linguistic changes. (McCulloch says most people’s linguistic patterns are set in adolescence. That is definitely not the experience I’ve had.) This book let me take a memory trip through the old days (coding slang, buddy, I don’t miss you), the medium days (lolcats, omg, how did I forget about lolcats???), and the newer but still bygone days (very doge, much missing).

I admit I had hopes for this book that it didn’t quite realize. McCulloch does cover tone of voice, but not to the degree that I wanted. I have long wanted a study on whether we all are actually reading textual tones of voice the same in our heads (and it would be so easy to set up a study on that! LINGUISTS PLEASE I AM BEGGING). I also wanted to know about the people being left out of the internet linguistic revolution. Do screen readers manage to communicate a tenth of the intertextual information available to their users? I really doubt it, and that is something I’ve been worrying about.

But I can’t judge a book on such a giant topic by what isn’t there, and what is there is entertaining as heck. I enjoyed this read. Because internet. <3
Profile Image for Peter Tillman.
3,749 reviews416 followers
February 19, 2020
A good book by a linguist about language on the internet. It's a bit scattershot, but I ended up reading, and liking, most of it. Her enthusiasm is infectious -- though we do get linguist-type stuff like (p. 138) when she "almost fell off her chair" on figuring out the use of the tilde in internet sarcasm. And the ~*~sparkle~*~ ecosystem! Heh.

My favorite chapter was her chapter on Internet People. By her classification, I fall into the tail end of the Old Internet group, from my Usenet activity in the late 1990's (ims), back in the days when a 28.8 modem was a big step up from the 14.4 I started on. The text-only web-browser then was Lynx, I think, which went extinct with even basic broadband service. Ah, memories....

I did skim some, but I recommend the book, especially for Internet People. Extra points for her archiving all her linked refs: fight link-rot! 3.6 stars, rounded up.

Here's the author at Scalzi's: https://whatever.scalzi.com/2019/08/0... Excerpt:
"I found out that, paradoxically, a book can be bigger than the internet. The very constraints of a book — its linearity, its lack of updates — are also its greatest strengths. I can be far more confident that each reader will have a roughly similar experience of a book, rather than spidering off in all directions as with hypertext. When I work on an article or the podcast, I have to assume that each individual post or episode might be the first time someone has even heard of linguistics. There’s no designated reading order for the internet. But with a book, I have the luxury of being able to take people through a sequence of chapters, letting ideas build on top of each other, developing a fuller argument. It’s a smaller space, but it can support bigger ideas.

In the end, I wrote a book about the internet by not trying to compete with the internet on its home turf. If you want to look up the latest memes and slang, there’s always websites like Know Your Meme and Urban Dictionary and Emojipedia. But if you want something that tries to take a step back and see the internet as if we’re already living in the future, well, may I interest you in a book?"
Profile Image for Jen.
773 reviews35 followers
July 26, 2019
。・:*:・゚★,。・:*:・゚ 4.5 stars 。・:*:・゚★,。・:*:・゚

Brilliant and joyful examination of language in the age of the internet. You'll learn something and you'll enjoy the ride. I think most people would find this interesting, but all you language/internet nerds out there will love it.
Profile Image for Katie.
70 reviews2 followers
October 4, 2019
If you have ever taken a linguistics class, skip chapter 1. If you used the internet in the early 2000s, skip chapter 2.

The other chapters have some interesting tidbits but no thread or narrative connecting them. The writing is largely observational, not insightful. And if you are aware of how people use emojis, memes and the like, none of it is new information.
Profile Image for Neil R. Coulter.
1,151 reviews143 followers
June 10, 2023
2023 review:

I had my writing class read Because Internet this semester, and I reread it along with the students. Obviously my earlier review indicates that I loved this book the first time through. The second time . . . I still enjoyed it, but I think I remembered it better than I'd expected, so there wasn't much rediscovery in the second read-through. The book also ages quickly, as even in just these past few years, my perspective on writing-about-writing has changed a bit. What I most loved this time about Because Internet is the opening chapters that explain the progression of kinds of "internet people." It's so clear and perceptive—a helpful reference.

My students liked the book, but I don't know that they completely loved it. It did lead to some good discussions throughout the time they were immersed in it, but I may switch in something else next time around.

2020 review:

Finally—an excellent book about internet-influenced language change! Other books on this topic (I’m thinking especially of Emmy Favilla’s dreary A World Without “Whom”) bothered me, but Gretchen McCulloch has triumphed. And the reason is simple: other authors in this area convey a sarcastic, smirky, mocking attitude toward the subject and at least some of their readers. By contrast, McCulloch writes from deep joy and delight, welcoming the reader as a friend who either already shares her gleeful exuberance about language or soon will, within a few pages of this book. Reading McCulloch is like having someone throw open the curtains in the room, letting sunshine and fresh air flood in. She is someone who genuinely enjoys internet communication but can also write about it in an objective, scholarly way. I just can’t say enough about how much fun this book was to read, even apart from how informative it was. I loved it, often sharing excerpts from it with my writing students, which led to some great discussions.

McCulloch’s main point throughout the book is that the internet’s influence on the English language (she acknowledges her focus on English, and specifically American English, but she invites other writers to make similar contributions in other languages and parts of the world) is not that the internet has degraded the language; rather, it has opened up communication to be freer and richer. I’m intrigued by her suggestion that, centuries from now, people may regard much of the period between the invention of the printing press (or at least the publication of Johnson’s dictionary) and the mainstream internet as an exceptional blip in the historical trajectory of English. That is, we’re emerging from a lot of years in which English was felt to be governed by a hierarchy of rules created by an elite class. Yes, there has always been informal English writing alongside the professional writing, but there’s been a feeling that the informal variety is lesser, even a corruption of what the rules tell us “real” English is. The freedom of communication on the internet is allowing us to now step back and consider the purpose of all writing as making connections between us, rather than simply an adherence to a code. McCulloch’s point is not that all writing is (or should be) becoming text-speak or lolcat memes, but just that the many ways informal internet communication has brought people together should make us think about writing in general. At the very least, we should acknowledge the value of all kinds of ways of engaging with one another through writing, instead of looking down on internet writing as some kind of teenage insult to English itself.

All the chapters are interesting, but what I remember most is chapter 3, where McCulloch explains a perspective on understanding internet use based on when and why people first started using the internet. I found that very insightful as a way of adding subtlety to the quicker and more typical “teenagers-vs.-parents” kinds of categories. I know I particularly enjoyed this discussion because I was one of the early users of the internet in the 1990s—after the more techie, “jacking in” era but before the mainstreaming, AOL era. Much of what she wrote resonated with my memories of those early days. I laughed a lot, reminded of those early concepts of “netiquette.”

I also loved McCulloch’s history of typographical tone of voice online, in chapter 4. Very compelling and fascinating overview of how people over the past few decades have negotiated new ways of putting their emotional tone and personality into text-only. I knew a little of that already, but a lot of that chapter’s content was new to me.

McCulloch’s enthusiasm for free, open, creative communication that connects people is infectious and marvelous. Here’s a little glimpse of that, from near the end of the book:
Our modern, Western notion that authorship should be solo and original is comparatively young and culturally bound, dating back only to after we had the ability to make faithful and exact copies at a mass scale. Copyright started evolving into its modern form in the centuries after the invention of the printing press made copying easy. In other words, we’ve had the right to adapt longer than we’ve had the right to prevent copying. I’m grateful for copyright and solo authorship: it’s what allows me, and all the other authors I’ve loved, to make any kind of living. But let’s not pretend that professionalized creativity is the only kind of creativity. (262)
My only criticism of the book is how often McCulloch begins sentences with “Like how”—if you read the book, you’ll see what I mean. But that’s a small annoyance in an otherwise fantastic book. Because Internet is not just a book about the internet. It changed my views on language, writing, and communication more deeply than anything I’ve read in quite a while. I highly recommend it.
Profile Image for Leslie.
319 reviews41 followers
June 20, 2022
As an applied linguist and Full Internet Person according to the standards of this book, I adored this. It made me laugh out loud and constantly rethink why I communicate the way I do when I’m online with my frands 🥰💕 and why we can share very specific memes with each other and it’s like we’ve exchanged a knowing glance across the room.

This was pretty accessible to read, although I can see a lot of the humor going over the heads of people who don’t internet it up every day. There is a lot about the history of the internet in social (as opposed to technical) terms - why people got online and how, how they created communities and therefore communicative contexts, and how that has evolved as we have created new and better ways of communicating with each other.
Profile Image for Allie.
142 reviews150 followers
July 14, 2020
Linguist Gretchen McCulloch has written a thought-provoking and passionate defense of the rise of internet language. I don’t share her enthusiasm for made-up spelling, sarcasm tildes, emoji, odd CAPITALIZATION, and the abandonment of standard grammar.* But I found the book interesting, while remaining bemused at her excitement over the devolution of language from Shakespeare’s sonnets to ttyl texting.

Language is constantly evolving, reflecting the influx of new ideas, the melding of different cultures, and technological innovation. Every generation creates its own slang, which is intentionally bewildering to their parents or grandparents. None of that is controversial; no one is arguing that we should be speaking Latin or Old Norse. Dictionaries add new words to reflect these changes and teens will bond in cliques using in-group language until the end of days. The medium certainly affects the message, from the gilded illustrations used by medieval monks to today’s GIFs.

But if I followed McCulloch’s arguments correctly, she is saying:

1. Spoken language preceded written language, so it is our primary method of expression;
2. Internet language is closer to spoken language than formal writing that follows standardized grammatical and spelling rules;
3. Informal writing is inherently better than formal writing, and thus internet language should be embraced as the best, most creative, and inclusive means of communication.

I would happily concede the first two points, but McCulloch lost me with her bias against correct grammar (“elitist”) traditional books (“fossils”), and formal writing (“static and disembodied”). She waves away dictionaries and frowns upon Samuel Johnson, who took our energetic ways of speaking and codified them into more rigid language. Apparently, our written language and grammar are just “…upholding the prejudices of a bunch of aristocrats from the 18th century.” McCulloch argues that internet writing “allows us to be more fully ourselves in an online world” and is fine with getting rid of formal writing. Abandon your periods, all ye who enter here…

I am seduced and enthralled by the written word. Anyone who has ever savored or repeated a beautifully crafted sentence in a favorite novel knows what I mean by that statement. McCulloch’s charge of elitism made no sense to me, since K-12 education is both free and mandatory in virtually all Westernized countries, and during those school years, everyone learns the same grammatical and spelling rules. Libraries are full of online and hard copy books that can give any reader a sense of the beauty, depth, and breadth of language across cultures.

McCulloch notes that adopting new vocabulary is most common in the first third of our lives, so early members of a community strongly influence the speech of later members. She leverages that idea to divide internet users into cohorts based on the initial social platforms they joined online, which influence how they speak and write. Apparently, there is a great divide between early users (the Old and Semi Internet People) and the later groups (Full and Post Internet People). If and how well you use internet language seems to depend whether you are oriented towards online or offline norms. (Clearly, I'm oriented towards offline norms.)

The middle of the book dragged a bit for me. McCulloch discusses emoji, lol, memes, and other internet speech norms. The evolution of emoji from a uniquely Japanese context to an international one was interesting, as was the discussion of using gestures across cultures. Even blind people speaking to other blind people use gestures, whether or not they have ever been sighted! But the middle chapters had a few too many sentences along the lines of: “I’d noticed that the linguistics meme energy had been shifting from Tumblr to Facebook groups.”

McCulloch gleefully shares that the Library of Congress is archiving the lolcat Bible, in which an internet group for cat memes translated the Bible into their language. So the first phrase in Genesis was translated as follows:

“In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth. And the earth was without form, and void; and darkness was upon the face of the deep.”
“Oh hai. In the beginning Ceiling Cat maded the skiez An da Urfs, but he did not eated dem.”

Of course, people should write to one another or post online in whatever way is most meaningful to them. If translating the Bible into an internet cat language makes someone happy, then that’s great. But I don’t think the language above is better, more expressive, or that it should replace traditional writing. Personally, I find the stream of consciousness writing, lack of caps, odd line breaks, abbreviations, symbols, and atypical spellings common to internet language to be distracting. I think the elegance of language gets lost in the white noise.

I agree with McCulloch that language is “humanity’s most spectacular open source project”. Ironically, she has clearly mastered the formal language that she disdains, writing fluidly, articulately, and expressively to share her passion for linguistics. While I don’t share her views, I would recommend this book to anyone interested in linguistics or an exploration of how the internet is shaping our culture.

*To all writers who refuse to start sentences with a capital letter: you are not e.e. cummings. Or, translated into internet language: YOU ARE NOT E.E. CUMMINGS.
Profile Image for Oleksandr Zholud.
1,251 reviews123 followers
May 29, 2020
This is non-fic collection of ways how languages (chiefly English, but others are mentioned) change due to the internet. I read is as a part of Monthly reads in May 2020 at Non Fiction Book Club group.

When ordinary people talk about how internet affected our writing communications, they usually grumble about bad grammar, incomplete sentences and general lack of “correct” writing style. Linguists see it differently: for them this is a new amazing era, where for the first time in history we can study the written texts not from formal documents but the closest to a living speech. This books details different ways these studies are made and what they found out.

A great thing is that the author shows current changes in the broader context, like not only how instant messengers changed the way we talk, but how telephones did. Or how punctuation evolved over the centuries to better deliver the message.

Some highlights:
- Emojis are used not as a language but are an equivalent of gestures
- ALL CAPS means crying out loud only recently. And now a period at the end of a sentence can be considered a passive aggressive
- Different people depending on the age when they ‘entered the net’ react differently on the same stimuli
Profile Image for Kat.
272 reviews659 followers
December 19, 2021
A book about the evolution of (the English) language but make it internet-related, nerdy, and fun at the same time? Sign me up!
description
I love me a good linguist book that discusses language outside highly-academic settings, and this one truly didn’t let me down. It’s full of did-you-knows and exciting facts, sometimes about very, very specific corners of the internet.

The book is structured in a way that makes it easy to follow. The beginning of the book is dedicated to a chapter covering informal writing and how the internet contributed to making it as popular as it is today. McCulloch then spends some time discussing language and society with a particular focus on the creation of language and dialect maps and how and why Twitter serves as a great option to conduct linguistic research. The most significant part of this book, however, is spent in dissecting the origins of (language) forums on the internet, how different generations of people belong to different ages of the internet and that the point in time you joined the internet massively influences your typographical tone of voice and how it is interpreted!

While McCulloch’s chapters on memes and especially emojis were very entertaining and gave me the feeling that I learned a lot, the thing that stuck with me most is the author’s mentions of the appropriation of Black people’s language that the internet fostered on a global scale.

1. You all remember “bae”, right? Did you know that up until 2014, “bae” was primarily used by African Americans “when it started appearing in tweets by white people, only to get co-opted by brands shortly thereafter” (McCulloch 22)?

2. “af” is an abbreviation I personally use a lot. It started at low levels in LA and Miami in 2009, then spread in Cali, the South, and around Chicago in 2011-2012, “suggesting that it was spreading from Hispanic to African American populations. In 2014 and 2015, ‘af’ started appearing in BuzzFeed headlines” (McCulloch 31) and mainstream brands once again started capitalising on its association with African American coolness.

3. Oh, and this one: 💅 I love that emoji because I find it is a great way to sass someone. McCulloch writes that “the painting fingernails emoji entered the mainstream by its association with the black drag queen expression ‘throwing shade,’ for giving subtle, cutting insult” (165-166).

4. THIS 👏WAS 👏A 👏VERY 👏INFORMATIVE 👏BOOK 👏. See what I did there? The trend of following each word with a clapping hands emoji started as an emoji representation of a beat gesture common among African American women.

These are just four examples of Black cultural appropriation, and that it extends even into the area of language use shouldn’t come as a surprise, but it’s nonetheless shocking.

All in all, this was a great read that truly benefited from being written by a knowledgeable, non-judgemental linguist because remember folks:

“Whatever else is changing for good or for bad in the world, the evolution of language is neither the solution to all of our problems nor the cause of them. It simply is.”
Profile Image for Leo Walsh.
Author 2 books121 followers
February 10, 2020
I heard BECAUSE INTERNET's author Gretchen McCulloch interviewed on NPR regarding this book. She was interesting, talking about how internet communications have changed the English language forever. She had serious academic credentials, so I listened.

That interview was so good, I watched her Ted talk. Also interesting, albeit less insightful than the interview.

This book is the weakest in the line. I think my big objection is her REFUSING to treat text and other online communications for what they are -- less information-rich, less enriching, and less humane than face-to-face or spoken word communications. And the way she gushes on about "sparkle punctuation" as a substitute for "gestures" sort of makes my point. There is NO REPLACEMENT for a face-to-face shrug, warm smile, smug half-smiled, etc.

That's not to say that I consider text-only communications to be utilitarian. Heck, look at all the novels I read, where I imagine characters, scenes and conversational voices with accents and varied intonation.

Thing is, novels manage this WITHOUT sparkle punctuation. What's more, I couldn't "imagine" a novel to life without real-world experience talking to and understanding people. Period. What's more, and tween addicted to sparkle punctuation will also need real-life experience with words, tone, and gesture to imagine Harry Potter into life.

But that tween could very easily function WITHOUT sparkle punctuation.

I suppose that's the difference between a kitschy fad and something substantive that matters.

I think the real story of digital communication is what McCulloch doesn't mention: it's engineered to be addictive. It's engineered only for profit, and Big Tech is less concerned about communication or enrichment than keeping people on Facebook or Youtube as many hours as possible. That's why tech mavens like Steve Jobs and Larry Page raised their children device-free. That should be telling you something.

So it seems to me that what McCulloch views as positive seems to me a call for help. We all need and desire community. We all need and desire deep connections with people. But too often, our cultures create isolated people. So those sparkle punctuations or memes or whatnot are all substitutes for what really matters.

All things considered, the book was a major let-down. Two-stars.

PS. I'm no Luddite. I love the internet. I love the promise of connectivity and the access to information if grants me. I'm just aware of its limits.
Profile Image for Iris.
581 reviews254 followers
March 29, 2021
this was? so interesting? I'm such a nerd about this stuff and it was really nice to read something that actually took internet stuff seriously, and also just omg I enjoyed this so much!! like this was so genuinely fun to read, I think especially because it wasn't too pretentious and didn't take itself too seriously lmao. anyways this was very cool, 10/10 recommend if you're interested in internet linguistics
Profile Image for Anna.
1,860 reviews843 followers
February 7, 2020
'Because Internet' is a highly entertaining examination of changing linguistic norms in the internet age. It hits that sweet spot between accessible writing and analytical rigour impressively well throughout. Successive chapters provoked a lot of thoughts about my own communication habits and those of my friends, family, colleagues, students, and peer group. It also gave me a much appreciated explanation as to why people use emojis, which I didn't previously understand the point of. They have rhythm, it turns out. McCulloch covers a series of fascinating topics, such as the generational differences in internet adoption (which do not map directly to age). Her consistent message is that changes in communication styles are worthy of study, rather than something deserving only critique. She points out that social media posts and messaging are informal communication forms, so should be compared with idle verbal chit-chat rather than formal letters.

My favourite chapters concerned how we signal tone of voice and gesture in typed conversations. I learned the origins of several conventions I'm familiar with, including exclamation!compounds and Ironic Capitals. This was all explained very neatly:

If polite typography, as we saw earlier, is about making extra effort, using initial capitals and friendly exclamation marks to signal cheerful distance or genuine enthusiasm, then ironic typography is the opposite on both counts: it introduces a note of dissonance that makes the reader look harder to find the double meaning. Any variation from the expected baseline will do, whether that's lowercasing, sparkle sarcasm, asking a rhetorical question by omitting the question mark, or ironically using outdated slang. [...] But crucially, irony requires this baseline in the first place. It required us to develop a set of typographical resources for indicating straightforward types of voices, like shouting and enthusiasm, before we could creatively subvert them.


Personally I like the omitted question mark as a tool of irony and am also fond of using 'fuckin' rather than 'fucking' when I want to sound ironic rather than just angry. I found this point about the popularity of videocalling highly plausible:

The problem with videocalling was that it faced an insurmountable social obstacle: with a robust norm of always answering a ringing phone and no efficient way to plan a phone call except via the same medium, the risk was too great of catching someone unclothed or with a messy house in the background. Picking up a videocall out of the blue was simply too awkward to contemplate. But since every videochat program includes a text messaging feature, you can plan a videochat before committing to one [...] and this awkwardness vanishes: you have the option to decline via text where no-one can see you, or a minute to scramble into a decent-looking shirt. Paradoxically, having access to the lesser intrusiveness of chat conversations makes it easier to have the higher-bandwidth conversations in video.


Personally I wouldn't dream of videocalling someone without arranging it via messages first. It's very rare for me to voice call someone without prior arrangement either. When someone calls unexpectedly I assume there's been a disaster.

Another point I appreciated concerned the characterisation of social media as a third place, a semi-public community space like a cafe. My advice to my Dad was that posting in an unlocked twitter account is like shouting in a public street. You don't know how many people will hear you, but it could be anything between zero and millions. To extend that, posting on goodreads is more like giving a short lecture about a book in a street of bookshops. You don't know how many people will hear you, but you can have a reasonable expectation that those who do have some interest in books.

'Because Internet' did make me realise that my own communication norms are quaintly formal. I am one of perhaps three people on planet Earth who still reflexively signs every single one of my text messages, with at the very least, 'A xxx' and usually, 'love, Anna xxx'. I don't use emojis or gifs, just the odd :) to add warmth at the end of a sentence. By default, I begin work emails with 'Dear...' and this book made me realise that I might be weirding out my students with this. Surely even today's youths have come across formal writing conventions before? I do switch to using 'Hi' after the person I'm in email conversation with has. On social media, I use 'likes' to bookmark things so I can find them again, rather than to indicate, 'Hello, I read your post'. (If I want to indicate that, I reply with, 'Hello, I read your post'.) As a consequence, I've accumulated a total of 50 likes after using twitter for more than ten years. I have no plans to change any of these habits as they don't seem to cause any harm, but it was certainly interesting to compare them with a fairly systematic review of prevailing norms.

The book's only notable flaw, on reflection, is that McCulloch's cheerfulness can be slightly too relentless. I appreciate her positivity about the evolution of language, and goodness knows it is nice to read a non-depressing book once in a while, but she does not acknowledge that our online communications are gathered and processed by giant tech companies in order to sell us stuff. This was not the case with letters, telegrams, phone calls, or even the early forms of internet, however we now live in a world of surveillance capitalism. Our online communication is observed and exploited to an extraordinary and unprecedented extent. And this manifests in memes. A form I particularly enjoy are tumblr posts joking about how impossible the site has been to monetise. The peak of these occurred when Yahoo sold tumblr for around $3 million last year, after paying $1.1 billion for it in 2013. This is my current favourite, though. I can understand why making money out of tumblr has proved so difficult: it's the most chaotic website I've ever used. Finding that link via google or tumblr's own search was impossible. I had to scroll back through the posts of a blog I remembered seeing it on, then follow the link back. Anyway, despite this lack of comment on how informal communication norms are developing in a commoditised space, I really enjoyed 'Because Internet' and would recommend it as both entertaining and informative.
Profile Image for Amar Pai.
960 reviews101 followers
November 26, 2020
Interesting topic but I got bored with the writing. McCulloch spends a lot of time trying to convince us that internet culture and internet language are worth studying, but anyone who's picked up this book already believes so. I would have preferred more in depth and insightful chapters on emojis and lulz speak. What's in here felt surprisingly superficial. I dunno I wanted this to be more. The discussion on "LOL" was alright but overall this book felt like too much time belaboring the obvious. We give you permission to write "lol" you don't have to write a chapter justifying it!
Profile Image for Gerhard.
1,162 reviews705 followers
December 11, 2021
'Around 7,000 languages are spoken in the world today, and the vast majority of them have only a tiny amount of representation on the internet. Wikipedia only has articles in 293 languages, and half of those languages have less than ten thousand articles. Google Translate supports 103 languages, but many of the language pairs are translated via English. Major social networks support even fewer: Facebook’s interface is available in about 100, Twitter’s in about 50, and new social networks tend to launch exclusively in one language.'

Review to follow.
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