Twitter and the Hashtag Way – Qrius
Jean Burgess, Queensland University of Technology
Perhaps no single character has been as iconic a symbol of Twitter as the now-ubiquitous hashtag.
The syntax of the hashtag has a few simple rules: it consists of the hash symbol (#) immediately followed by a string of alphanumeric characters, with no spaces or punctuation.
It is used routinely in social media communication across a number of platforms including Tumblr, Instagram, and even Facebook, but its most important point of emergence and polarisation has been in Twitter.
The hashtag remains most comfortable in Twitter, and it was Twitter that turned it into a highly significant, multi-functional feature. The hashtag has made its way off the internet, appearing regularly on television, in advertising, on products and on protest signs around the world.
From its beginnings as a geeky tool designed to help individual users deal with an increasingly fragmented information stream, Twitter made the hashtag a new and powerful part of the worlds cultural, social and political vocabulary.
The @ feature helped people organise into pairs and create conversational streams. The hashtag, which organises tweets into topics, publics, and communities, goes to the heart of a crucial question: how is the internet organised and for whom?
Although its use on Twitter was new, the # has a prehistory both as a punctuation mark and as part of internet communication. Imported from elsewhere, as was the @, the hashtag brought some of its prior conventional understandings with it.
Known as the octothorpe by typography experts, in early computer-mediated communication the hash or pound symbol was used to mark channels and roles in systems like Internet Relay Chat (real-time, online text messaging used as early as 1988). It therefore worked to both categorise topics and group users.
The # also became closely tied to crowd-sourced content tagging systems. On the music-streaming site Last.fm, users could tag artists and songs. The site used these tags as information to learn about music, fuelling recommendations and radio streams, and laying the groundwork for Spotify and other apps current recommendation algorithms.
User-contributed tags were important on the Flickr photosharing website, where they helped direct people to images and to one another a practice that was carried over to Instagram. Crucially, users could add as many tags to their Flickr photographs as they liked, creating a system that was less a taxonomy (an expertly ordered system based on exclusive, hierarchical categories) and more a folksonomy (a crowd-sourced one, based on inclusive tags and aggregation).
Folksonomical ordering, in the mid-2000s, was widely imagined as a more efficient, organic way of ordering content than categories or directories, and it was this model that underpinned the popular social bookmarking service del.icio.us.
The Flickr folksonomy of user-contributed tags was paradigmatic of the Web 2.0 ideology marked by a shift from the web 1.0 idea that web development was about serving content to audiences to one where the goal was building architectures for participation of users (sometimes distinguished from passive website visitors) and the expectation that the user communitys activities would add further value.
Reddits systems for upvoting user-curated content, subreddits and modern Twitters aggregated trending topics are contemporary versions of this early tag-based co-curation model.
As far as we know, the hashtags use in Twitter was first proposed in mid-2007 by Chris Messina in a series of blog posts.
In Messinas view, the hashtag was a solution to a need. At this time, it was still possible to see a public feed of every single tweet from a public account. Topical conversations among people who did not follow one another were incoherent at best.
The users advocating for the hashtag were technically proficient (many of them also developers) with an active online presence, who positioned themselves as participants in a community of lead users.
While some users were experimenting with hashtags, Messinas vision for them didnt catch on widely until a particularly acute and sufficiently significant event the San Diego brushfires in 2007.
With this event, Messina achieved wider take-up of the hashtag as a tool for coordinating crisis communication by actively lobbying other lead users and media organisations.
Although this rapidly unfolding disaster demonstrated a clear and legitimating use case, the broader meaning of the hashtag and its possible uses remained ambiguous. Despite this, Messina, as a tech-industry insider and lead user, continued to widely advocate for its use even reportedly pitching it to the Twitter leadership.
Journalist Nick Bilton relates an encounter between Twitter founders Biz Stone and Ev Williams and Messina, at the Twitter offices, as follows:
I really think you should do something with hashtags on Twitter, Chris told them. Hashtags are for nerds, Biz replied. Ev added that they were too harsh and no one is ever going to understand them.
Twitter had begun wrestling with the problem (which still haunts it) of conflict between the cultures of expert users that made the platform work for them and the new users they alienated but whom the company badly needed to sustain its growth. The hashtag provoked contestation between Twitters different cultures as it was taken up both for the serious uses such as disaster and professional discussion Messina had envisioned and to create sociable rituals and play.
From the beginning, there was debate around the right way to use hashtags.
As Messinas historical documentation and that of others show, there were several competing models of how and why to coordinate Twitter activity as the flow of tweets started to grow beyond an easily manageable size.
Perhaps the # was a tag, designed to help organise collections of tweets on shared topics? Or was it a way to form channels, or groups of users interested in those topics?
Underlying these different models of what the hashtag could become were different models of Twitter: as an information network, a social networking site or online community, or a platform for discussion and the emergence of publics (organised communities).
Such ideas were still new and hotly contested at the time. Though the informational seems to have won out over the conversational model of Twitter, the hashtag remains, and is used for an astonishing array of social, cultural, and political purposes some of them vitally useful, not all of them serious, and some of them downright toxic.
The website Hashtags.org was launched in December 2007, and provided a real-time tracking and indexing of hashtags before Twitter implemented search. Participants at an event, for instance, could visit the website to see other tweets from the same event.
The hashtags in the earliest archived version of the Hashtags.org homepage, from April 2008, include a number of academic and tech conferences (#EconSM, #netc08, #interact2008) and sporting and entertainment events (#idol, #yankees, #REDSOX), and tweet categories (#haiku). Hashtags were used for coordinating discussion topics and finding like-minded users (#seriousgames, #punknews, #college, #PHX), brands and products (#gmail, #firefox), and even people (such as Wired journalist #ChrisAnderson).
Back then, the most tweeted hashtags were represented as amassing tweets numbering in the tens or at most hundreds, a reminder of the modest scale of Twitter at the time. Uses of hashtags, such as for humour, activism or second-screen television viewing, had yet to emerge.
Ever since those early debates about whether Twitter needed channels (of topics) or groups (of users), hashtags have continued to play both structural and semantic roles: that is, they coordinate both communities and topics, helping users find each other and encounter a range of contributions to the discussion of issues and events.
The hashtag has fostered the rise of Twitter as a platform for news, information and professional promotion, yet the forces that allowed hashtags to become influential are deeply rooted in its conversational and sociable uses.
The capacity of the hashtag to help people navigate real-time events such as disasters, protests and conferences, and to expand and solidify social connections and community, proved particularly ideal for social movements and activism.
Such uses have in many ways come to define both the hashtag and, increasingly, Twitter itself. Perhaps the most notable confluence of hashtags and bodies-in-the-street activism has come from #Blacklivesmatter. As US academics Deen Freelon, Charlton D. McIlwain, and Meredith D. Clark document:
The Twitter hashtag was created in July 2013 by activists Alicia Garza, Patrisse Cullors, and Opal Tometi in the wake of George Zimmermans acquittal for second-degree murder of unarmed Black teenager Trayvon Martin.
For more than a year, #Blacklivesmatter was only a hashtag, and not a very popular one: it was used in only 48 public tweets in June 2014 and in 398 tweets in July 2014. But by August 2014 that number had skyrocketed to 52,288, partly due to the slogans frequent use in the context of the Ferguson protests. Some time later, Garza, Cullors, Tometi, and others debuted Black Lives Matter as a chapter-based activist organization.
Its easy to dismiss hashtag activism as a form of slacktivism rather than real political engagement. But the rise of #Blacklivesmatter and its ties to street protests and unjust policing serves as an important reminder of the embodiment and liveness of many events that might look merely like data or chatter when viewed as hashtags.
This is an edited extract from Twitter: A Biography by Jean Burgess and Nancy K. Baym, published by NYU Press.
Nancy K. Baym is Senior Principal Researcher, Microsoft Research and Research Affiliate in Comparative Media Studies/Writing, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge Massachusetts.
Jean Burgess, Professor and Director, Digital Media Research Centre, Queensland University of Technology
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
Stay updated with all the insights.Navigate news, 1 email day.Subscribe to Qrius
Originally posted here:
Twitter and the Hashtag Way - Qrius
- Social Networking Market to Reach USD 209.82 Billion by 2030, - openPR.com - July 6th, 2025 [July 6th, 2025]
- You cant pause the internet: social media creators hit by burnout - The Guardian - July 6th, 2025 [July 6th, 2025]
- 'The Social Network' is getting a sequel. Here's our dream cast. - Business Insider - July 6th, 2025 [July 6th, 2025]
- Return of The Social Network - Splice Today - July 6th, 2025 [July 6th, 2025]
- Quentin Tarantino Said the Best Movie of the 2010s Is This Andrew Garfield Drama With 96% on Rotten Tomatoes - Comic Book Resources - July 6th, 2025 [July 6th, 2025]
- What is doxing? A glimpse into the battle for anonymity on social media - EL PAS English - July 6th, 2025 [July 6th, 2025]
- Inside Zuckerbergs Meta: How the Company is Reshaping Social Media and the Metaverse - Vocal - July 4th, 2025 [July 4th, 2025]
- ICEBlock climbs to the top of the App Store charts after officials slam it - Engadget - July 2nd, 2025 [July 2nd, 2025]
- Self-regulation has proven a failure: Brazilian leaders defend the need for social media regulation - Poynter - July 2nd, 2025 [July 2nd, 2025]
- I Never Thought I'd Say This But We Really Need The Social Network 2 Right Now - TheGamer - July 2nd, 2025 [July 2nd, 2025]
- World Social Media Day 2025: Celebrating Connection & Creativity - The Bridge Chronicle - July 2nd, 2025 [July 2nd, 2025]
- World Social Media Day 2025: From Orkut Scraps to Instagram Reels The Evolution of Online Networking in India - BizzBuzz - July 2nd, 2025 [July 2nd, 2025]
- Brenda Song opens up about Disney's restriction for her role in 'The Social Network' - Geo.tv - July 2nd, 2025 [July 2nd, 2025]
- Social media reacts to jibe at players over fixture schedule - Yahoo Sports - June 29th, 2025 [June 29th, 2025]
- Iran using social media to recruit spies at scale, former Mossad official warns - The Telegraph - June 29th, 2025 [June 29th, 2025]
- Can you turn off generative AI from social media and your phone? - RNZ - June 29th, 2025 [June 29th, 2025]
- Meet 19 startups in social networking, dating, and AI that investors have their eyes on - Business Insider - June 29th, 2025 [June 29th, 2025]
- She Ripped German Conservatives on Social Media. They Didnt Forget. - The New York Times - June 29th, 2025 [June 29th, 2025]
- Social Network Sequel in the Works With Aaron Sorkin Writing, Directing for Sony - The Hollywood Reporter - June 29th, 2025 [June 29th, 2025]
- How Jesse Eisenberg Can Crush His (Potential) Role in The Social Network Part II - Hey Alma - June 29th, 2025 [June 29th, 2025]
- Authorities arrest fugitive who police say posted on social media following New Orleans jailbreak - ABC News - Breaking News, Latest News and Videos - June 29th, 2025 [June 29th, 2025]
- The Social Network Sequel in the Works, Directed by Aaron Sorkin - Variety - June 29th, 2025 [June 29th, 2025]
- In Alabama, a Social Media Influencer Really Gets Wild - The New York Times - June 29th, 2025 [June 29th, 2025]
- Brenda Song Says Disney Didnt Want Her Acting in Gran Torino and The Social Network. She Fought Back: This Is the Opportunity of a Lifetime - Variety - June 29th, 2025 [June 29th, 2025]
- The Social Network 2 Is Missing The Best Part Of The First Movie's 96% RT Success - Screen Rant - June 29th, 2025 [June 29th, 2025]
- Aaron Sorkin will direct a sequel to 'The Social Network' inspired by The Facebook Files - Business Insider - June 29th, 2025 [June 29th, 2025]
- Aaron Sorkin is making a sequel to The Social Network - The Verge - June 29th, 2025 [June 29th, 2025]
- Nine Pressing Questions About The Social Network Part II - The Ringer - June 29th, 2025 [June 29th, 2025]
- The Social Network Part II Is Coming and Aaron Sorkin Is Taking on a New Role - Gizmodo - June 29th, 2025 [June 29th, 2025]
- Maximization style and social media addiction linked to relationship obsessive compulsive disorder - PsyPost - June 29th, 2025 [June 29th, 2025]
- Sequel to The Social Network on the way - Boing Boing - June 29th, 2025 [June 29th, 2025]
- Aaron Sorkin and Sony working on The Social Network sequel - Screen Daily - June 29th, 2025 [June 29th, 2025]
- The Social Network Part II in the works - NME - June 29th, 2025 [June 29th, 2025]
- The Social Network Sequel Is Finally Happening After a 15-Year Wait, But With 1 Big Change - Comic Book Resources - June 28th, 2025 [June 28th, 2025]
- The Social Network Part II Is Happening, And Facebook Probably Wont Like It - Kotaku - June 28th, 2025 [June 28th, 2025]
- The Social Network sequel in the works; Aaron Sorkin to direct - Daijiworld - June 28th, 2025 [June 28th, 2025]
- The Social Network Part II in the Works with Aaron Sorkin Writing and Directing - Yahoo - June 28th, 2025 [June 28th, 2025]
- A Social Network Sequel Is Finally Happening, But There's One Big Problem - SlashFilm - June 28th, 2025 [June 28th, 2025]
- 'The Social Network Part II' Is Happening. It's an Even Bigger Deal Than You Think. - Esquire - June 28th, 2025 [June 28th, 2025]
- Social Network 2 - The Social Network 2 is officially in the works, and here's what we know so far - Cosmopolitan India - Cosmopolitan India - June 28th, 2025 [June 28th, 2025]
- The Social Network 2 Is in the Works With a Script by Aaron Sorkin - Us Weekly - June 28th, 2025 [June 28th, 2025]
- Another Facebook movie is coming, and it's gonna be dark - SFGATE - June 28th, 2025 [June 28th, 2025]
- The Social Network Part II In The Works At Sony Aaron Sorkin To Write And Direct - empireonline.com - June 28th, 2025 [June 28th, 2025]
- Are we ready for Aaron Sorkins The Social Network Part II? - Flickering Myth - June 28th, 2025 [June 28th, 2025]
- The Social Network sequel officially in the works after 15 year wait - uk.news.yahoo.com - June 28th, 2025 [June 28th, 2025]
- Sorkin & Fincher: The Internet Was Immaterial To The Social Networks Appeal - Hollywood Outbreak - June 28th, 2025 [June 28th, 2025]
- The Social Network Part 2 is in the Works - Zinc 96.1 FM - June 28th, 2025 [June 28th, 2025]
- Social Media Schemes: How Beijing Uses Influencers to Grow Power from Within - Vision Times - June 28th, 2025 [June 28th, 2025]
- Aaron Sorkin Working On The Social Network Part II Everything We Know So Far - 9meters - June 28th, 2025 [June 28th, 2025]
- The Social Network Part II In the Works: Aaron Sorkin Returning, Early Plot Hints Revealed - Just Jared - June 28th, 2025 [June 28th, 2025]
- Australia regulator and YouTube spar over under-16s social media ban - The Hindu - June 28th, 2025 [June 28th, 2025]
- Govt Forms Special Cyber Team to Curb Hate Speech on Social Media During Muharram - tribal news network - June 28th, 2025 [June 28th, 2025]
- Alex Rodriguezs Girlfriend Jaclyn Cordeiro Lights Up Social Media With Last Day of School Smiles With Her Daughters - PFSN - June 28th, 2025 [June 28th, 2025]
- LinkedIn or left out?: Columbia students weigh in on the platforms influence - Columbia Daily Spectator - June 24th, 2025 [June 24th, 2025]
- Fans send love to Guy Fieri after heartbreaking post on social media - SILive.com - June 24th, 2025 [June 24th, 2025]
- New State Privacy and Minor Social Media Laws to Become Effective in July - Inside Privacy - June 24th, 2025 [June 24th, 2025]
- FDD Uncovers Large Iranian Network Impersonating Israelis on Social Media - Foundation for Defense of Democracies - June 24th, 2025 [June 24th, 2025]
- US resumes visas for foreign students but demands access to social media accounts - ABC News - Breaking News, Latest News and Videos - June 20th, 2025 [June 20th, 2025]
- Influencer's VERY rude behaviour on board 10-hour-flight has social media in uproar - Daily Mail - June 20th, 2025 [June 20th, 2025]
- Some members of England womens soccer team to avoid social media during tournaments due to damaging online abuse - CNN - June 20th, 2025 [June 20th, 2025]
- David Rafferty (opinion): What is a successful salary for Gen Z? - CT Insider - June 20th, 2025 [June 20th, 2025]
- Effect of emotional intelligence on problematic mobile social media use: mediating role of peer relationships and experiential avoidance - Frontiers - June 20th, 2025 [June 20th, 2025]
- When it comes to peoples identity on social media, which of the below comes closest to what you think should happen? - YouGov UK - June 20th, 2025 [June 20th, 2025]
- Reddit vs. Nextdoor: Which Social Network Stock Has the Edge? - Zacks Investment Research - June 20th, 2025 [June 20th, 2025]
- Future unclear for Province couple who found kidney on social media - InMaricopa - June 18th, 2025 [June 18th, 2025]
- Social media and connecting with our community - The Royal Society of Chemistry - June 18th, 2025 [June 18th, 2025]
- Reddit vs. Nextdoor: Which Social Network Stock Has the Edge? - Yahoo Finance - June 18th, 2025 [June 18th, 2025]
- Midwest Travel Network brings social media influencers to Grand Island historical attractions - KSNB - June 18th, 2025 [June 18th, 2025]
- Mark Zuckerberg Declares the End of Social Media as We Know It, and Unveils Whats Coming Next in the Digital World - Indian Defence Review - June 18th, 2025 [June 18th, 2025]
- Social media claims of ICE raids in OKC disputed by law enforcement, lawmakers - KOKH - June 18th, 2025 [June 18th, 2025]
- Meet The Leftwing Activist Using Social Media To Funnel Riot Gear To Anti-ICE Protests - The Daily Wire - June 18th, 2025 [June 18th, 2025]
- "Social media is high on our priority list" - Adam Silver debunks the narrative for the NBA's low TV ratings while also addressing social... - June 18th, 2025 [June 18th, 2025]
- South Brunswick Board of Education VP Removed from Committees Due to Social Media Posts on Halal Foods - TAPinto - June 7th, 2025 [June 7th, 2025]
- How social media is giving wings to upward mobility dreams, spurring sexual abuse - The Federal - June 7th, 2025 [June 7th, 2025]
- Shes made it her business to show companies how to use social media to stand out - Providence Business News - June 7th, 2025 [June 7th, 2025]
- Introducing Bounce, a tool to move your following between Bluesky and Mastodon - TechCrunch - June 7th, 2025 [June 7th, 2025]
- Bonfire's new software lets users build their own social communities, free from platform control - TechCrunch - June 7th, 2025 [June 7th, 2025]
- Chinas RedNote sees valuation soar with backing from GSR Ventures - South China Morning Post - June 7th, 2025 [June 7th, 2025]
- The forgotten social networking site that wrecked and rekindled relationships - Metro.co.uk - June 7th, 2025 [June 7th, 2025]
- Trump vs. Elon Musk: The Battle of Giants in Politics and Social Media - asianewsnetwork.net - June 7th, 2025 [June 7th, 2025]