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  1. לקסם הבא אזדקק לכנפיים

    A collection of short stories published as images on Facebook.

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 25.02.2012 - 21:13

  2. For My Next Illusion I Will Use Wings

    A collection of very short stories, published as images in a photo album on Facebook. This is a selection of the original Hebrew, translated by Jessica Cohen for, and published by, the journal Electric Literature.

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 25.02.2012 - 21:26

  3. Postmeaning

    ose poem is published serially through a Facebook page which gathers all of its postings in its timeline since it began on February 27, 2011. The writing is surreal at times, mixing topics and language in ways that are grammatical but obeying an almost dreamlike logic, like Gertrude Stein’s Tender Buttons. Since its launching, every single one of its daily (or almost-daily) postings begins an ends with an incomplete sentence and even word, evoking a sense that it is part of a larger thought or text, yet there is no grammatical connection between any entry and the ones before or after.

    Quoted from I ♥ E-Poetry entry.

    Leonardo Flores - 23.02.2013 - 19:50

  4. Debasheesh Parveen and Ariadna Alfil

    These two “Facebots” (Facebook bots) were created in the last days of 2009 and quickly began to make friends, post images, and make cryptic status updates, commenting on each other’s updates. They started a relationship on January 13, 2010 and got married (that is, changed their relationship status to “married” on Facebook) on March 21, 2010. Ever since they have both been making status updates automatically every hour, (Ariadna every 2 hours) using the algorithm described below:

    Debasheesh Parveen is one of the 99 Sacred Names of the Internet. It is also an algorithm:

    1. Debasheesh Parveen takes a random news headline from the Al Jazeera feed.
    2. The headline is distorted using a text-manipulation algorithm.
    3. One of the words of the headline is chosen to search for an image on the Internet.
    4. The headline and the image are posted to Debasheesh Parveen’s Facebook profile.

    This happens automatically, at regular intervals.

    Quoted from I ♥ E-Poetry entry and Tisselli's description.

    Leonardo Flores - 12.03.2013 - 18:14

  5. L'altra

    Alternate reality serial conducted on Facebook.

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 30.06.2013 - 13:11

  6. Image fantôme

    Du 17 avril 2010 au 13 septembre 2011, Nicolas Sordello et Lucile Haute tiennent un journal visuel sur Facebook. Chaque jour, à tour de rôle, ils postent une image carré et présentant la date du jour. L'image de la veille est supprimée. L'adresse directe de l'image du jour est publiée sur le profil et ouverte aux commentaires. Pendant une durée variable, l'image supprimée reste accessible sur les serveurs de Facebook. Sur le mur de Image Fantome, les mots restent tandis que les images disparaissent.

    (Source: Authors' description from project site)

    Scott Rettberg - 14.12.2013 - 06:14

  7. Such Tweet Sorrow

    Romeo and Juliet in real time across Twitter and the web, with six Royal Shakespeare Company actors living the story in a UK town in 2010. In addition to Twitter, actors, fans and readers used other social media including Facebook and last.fm to enact the story.

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 12.05.2014 - 18:16

  8. My Book of #GHcoats

    This book is a collection of misattributed quotes created in a collaborative writing project by a group of Ghanian writers on Facebook. Initially the project used the hashtag #GHquotes but it was changed to #GHcoats as a play on both the common Ghanian pronunciation of quotes as coats and the Ghanian sartorial fascination with ornate and often climate-inappropriate clothing. Many of the quotes play upon Ghanian themes, but are attributed to famous people, such as Albert Einstein, Chairman Mao or Mohammed Ali. (Source: https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/384482)

    Alvaro Seica - 19.06.2014 - 17:02

  9. I Work for the Web: a netprov

    I Work for the Web was a netprov held in April 2015 on Twitter and Facebook. The premise: The "I Work for the Web" campaign, created by RockeHearst Omnipresent Bundlers, asked users to Tweet what it would be like if all their Liking, Following, and Favoriting were their jobs. But not everyone was a happy little link laborer. A movement was brewing. Resistance from the workers led to the founding of a union, The International Web and Facetwite Workers. But then something happened at the Web workers favorite diner Nighthawks the night of April 4th. But what? As the struggle between the burgeoning union movement and the Free corporate web played out, leaders, heroes, and cowards emerged in the form of Web workers of all walks of life from cats to children's toys. I Work for the Web was a reflection on the free labor we provide for the Internet and those who capitalize on it. Players joined by using the #IWFW hashtag or by joining the FB group.

    Mark Marino - 17.04.2015 - 10:24