Many-to-many

Many-to-many communication is a product of the age of modernization that captures the increased role of the public in society. Scholar, Damien Pfister, addresses this paradigm's ability for interlocutors to sustain "large-sclale, interlinked, synchronous and asynchronous contact." (Pfister, 2013). [1] The implications of many-to-many communication provide new ways for non-experts to have their opinion heard and evaluate more opinions at large.

The many-to-many communication paradigm[2] is one of three major Internet computing paradigms, characterized by multiple users contributing and receiving information, with the information elements often interlinked across different websites. Developments such as file sharing, blogs, Wikis, and tagging are media forms that reflect this paradigm; these contrast with both the one-to-one (characterized by e-mail, FTP, and Telnet) and one-to-many (characterized by websites) paradigms.

With the evolution to the full "many-to-many" computing paradigm, people can input and receive information to and from the Internet; they will be able to connect and communicate dynamically within a flexibly formed scope; there will be no artificial boundary between information and communication tools, and the definition of "many" will go well beyond people to include entities such as organizations, products, processes, events, and concepts.

References

  1. Pfister, Damien (Spring 2019). "Networked expertise in the Era of many-to-many Communication: On Wikipedia and invention". Social Epistemology. 25: 217–213.
  2. Crosbie, V. (2002). "What is New Media?".
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.