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How Social Media Archives Are Changing Historical Memory

&Tab;&Tab;<div class&equals;"wpcnt">&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;<div class&equals;"wpa">&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;<span class&equals;"wpa-about">Advertisements<&sol;span>&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;<div class&equals;"u top&lowbar;amp">&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;<amp-ad width&equals;"300" height&equals;"265"&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab; type&equals;"pubmine"&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab; data-siteid&equals;"173035871"&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab; data-section&equals;"1">&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab;<&sol;amp-ad>&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;<&sol;div>&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;<&sol;div>&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<p class&equals;"wp-block-paragraph"><strong>Why Digital Footprints Are Becoming the New Historical Record<&sol;strong><&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<h3 class&equals;"wp-block-heading has-medium-font-size">Introduction&colon; A New Kind of Memory<&sol;h3>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"has-small-font-size wp-block-paragraph">In the past&comma; history was curated by gatekeepers—archivists&comma; historians&comma; and institutions that determined what was worth preserving&period; But today&comma; our timelines tell stories&period; Social media&comma; once dismissed as ephemeral and personal&comma; has evolved into a sprawling archive of the collective human experience&period; Tweets&comma; Instagram posts&comma; TikTok videos&comma; Reddit threads&comma; these digital artifacts are becoming powerful tools in shaping what societies remember and how they interpret them&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"has-small-font-size wp-block-paragraph">In this new era&comma; social media is no longer just a form of communication&semi; it is a living archive&period; And like all archives&comma; it plays a crucial role in shaping historical memory&period; From real-time documentation of protests to viral posts that redefine public figures&comma; the way we construct and access history is being fundamentally rewritten by the platforms we scroll through every day&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<hr class&equals;"wp-block-separator has-alpha-channel-opacity" &sol;>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<h3 class&equals;"wp-block-heading has-medium-font-size">Section 1&colon; The Rise of the Digital Archive<&sol;h3>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"has-small-font-size wp-block-paragraph">Social media is redefining what it means to preserve history&period; Traditional archives—like libraries and museums—operate through deliberate collection and preservation&period; In contrast&comma; digital archives accumulate almost passively&comma; capturing billions of moments in real time&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"has-small-font-size wp-block-paragraph">With over 500 million tweets sent daily and millions of photos and videos uploaded to Instagram and TikTok&comma; the sheer volume of data is staggering&period; But unlike physical archives&comma; these moments are searchable&comma; shareable&comma; and remixable&comma; offering new layers of historical texture&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"has-small-font-size wp-block-paragraph"><strong>Key examples include&colon;<&sol;strong><&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<ul class&equals;"wp-block-list">&NewLine;<li class&equals;"has-small-font-size"><strong>Black Lives Matter &lpar;BLM&rpar;&colon;<&sol;strong> In 2020&comma; viral videos of George Floyd’s death and the ensuing protests became defining artifacts of global reckoning with racial injustice&period; Hashtags like &num;BlackLivesMatter archived a collective experience&comma; creating an organic digital record that scholars&comma; journalists&comma; and activists still reference&period;<&sol;li>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<li class&equals;"has-small-font-size"><strong>Arab Spring&colon;<&sol;strong> Social media posts became primary sources for documenting uprisings in Tunisia&comma; Egypt&comma; and beyond&period; Without these digital records&comma; much of the narrative would have been lost or distorted&period;<&sol;li>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<li class&equals;"has-small-font-size"><strong>COVID-19 pandemic&colon;<&sol;strong> Personal Instagram stories&comma; TikToks of quarantined routines&comma; and viral misinformation campaigns together form a complex digital memory of a global crisis&period;<&sol;li>&NewLine;<&sol;ul>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<hr class&equals;"wp-block-separator has-alpha-channel-opacity" &sol;>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<h3 class&equals;"wp-block-heading has-medium-font-size">Section 2&colon; Who Gets to Be Remembered&quest;<&sol;h3>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"has-small-font-size wp-block-paragraph">One of the most radical shifts brought on by social media archives is the democratization of memory&period; Historically&comma; only the powerful were preserved—kings&comma; generals&comma; and nation-builders&period; However&comma; in the age of digital archives&comma; the stories of ordinary people are being recorded and remembered alongside elite narratives&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"has-small-font-size wp-block-paragraph">This shift raises important questions&colon;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<ul class&equals;"wp-block-list">&NewLine;<li class&equals;"has-small-font-size"><strong>Whose voices are preserved&quest;<&sol;strong><&sol;li>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<li class&equals;"has-small-font-size"><strong>Who has the tools to curate or delete their digital legacy&quest;<&sol;strong><&sol;li>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<li class&equals;"has-small-font-size"><strong>How does virality influence what is remembered&quest;<&sol;strong><&sol;li>&NewLine;<&sol;ul>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"has-small-font-size wp-block-paragraph">For example&comma; during the &num;MeToo movement&comma; thousands of survivors shared personal stories of assault and harassment&period; These first-person narratives&comma; once confined to private journals or lost to silence&comma; are now part of public record&comma; shaping collective memory about gender&comma; power&comma; and accountability&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"has-small-font-size wp-block-paragraph">This archive is less curated and more chaotic&comma; but also more inclusive&period; It challenges the top-down model of history-making&comma; opening up memory to horizontal participation&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<hr class&equals;"wp-block-separator has-alpha-channel-opacity" &sol;>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<h3 class&equals;"wp-block-heading has-medium-font-size">Section 3&colon; The Politics of Deletion<&sol;h3>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"has-small-font-size wp-block-paragraph">While social media archives have expanded who can participate in memory-making&comma; they also introduce new vulnerabilities&period; Unlike physical records stored in libraries or basements&comma; digital content can be deleted&comma; deplatformed&comma; or algorithmically buried&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"has-small-font-size wp-block-paragraph">Consider&colon;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<ul class&equals;"wp-block-list">&NewLine;<li class&equals;"has-small-font-size"><strong>Government censorship&colon;<&sol;strong> In countries like China&comma; posts about Tiananmen Square or the Hong Kong protests are swiftly erased from social platforms&period; The deletion isn&&num;8217&semi;t just technical—it&&num;8217&semi;s a political act that rewrites public memory&period;<&sol;li>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<li class&equals;"has-small-font-size"><strong>Corporate control&colon;<&sol;strong> Platforms like Twitter &lpar;now X&rpar;&comma; Meta&comma; and TikTok can remove posts or entire accounts based on evolving community guidelines&period; Elon Musk’s recent control of Twitter’s API access&comma; for instance&comma; has raised alarm among historians and archivists who rely on third-party tools like the Wayback Machine or Twitter’s public API to preserve important posts&period;<&sol;li>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<li class&equals;"has-small-font-size"><strong>User behavior&colon;<&sol;strong> People also delete posts—sometimes to protect privacy&comma; sometimes to erase problematic pasts&period; While this may be empowering individually&comma; it also complicates the integrity of the digital archive&period;<&sol;li>&NewLine;<&sol;ul>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"has-small-font-size wp-block-paragraph">In short&comma; our digital memories are subject to private ownership and political pressures in ways traditional archives are not&period; This introduces a new kind of fragility into historical memory&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<figure class&equals;"wp-block-image size-large is-resized"><img src&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;theword360&period;com&sol;wp-content&sol;uploads&sol;2025&sol;07&sol;rob-coates-&lowbar;qAasWdI9qY-unsplash-1024x683&period;jpg" alt&equals;"" class&equals;"wp-image-23377" style&equals;"aspect-ratio&colon;1&period;5001674294006027&semi;width&colon;436px&semi;height&colon;auto" &sol;><&sol;figure>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<hr class&equals;"wp-block-separator has-alpha-channel-opacity" &sol;>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<h3 class&equals;"wp-block-heading has-medium-font-size">Section 4&colon; Archiving in Real Time<&sol;h3>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"has-small-font-size wp-block-paragraph">The internet has collapsed the timeline of historical memory&period; In the past&comma; history was something we processed years or decades later&period; Now&comma; it unfolds and is archived in real time&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"has-small-font-size wp-block-paragraph">For example&colon;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<ul class&equals;"wp-block-list">&NewLine;<li class&equals;"has-small-font-size"><strong>January 6 Capitol Riots&colon;<&sol;strong> Livestreams&comma; Facebook photos&comma; and Parler posts became immediate evidence for law enforcement and historians alike&period; The FBI used these archives not only to make arrests but also to reconstruct the event’s timeline&period;<&sol;li>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<li class&equals;"has-small-font-size"><strong>Ukraine-Russia War&colon;<&sol;strong> Ukrainians have used Telegram&comma; TikTok&comma; and Twitter to document bombings&comma; displacement&comma; and resistance&period; These posts are now part of wartime archives used by international media&comma; policymakers&comma; and humanitarian organizations&period;<&sol;li>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<li class&equals;"has-small-font-size"><strong>Climate activism&colon;<&sol;strong> Social media serves as a visual record of environmental protests&comma; from Greta Thunberg’s solo strikes to massive global climate marches&period; These digital traces add emotional urgency to policy discussions&period;<&sol;li>&NewLine;<&sol;ul>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"has-small-font-size wp-block-paragraph">The ability to archive in real time creates a kind of living history&period; But it also blurs the boundary between news&comma; narrative&comma; and memory&period; When everything is archived immediately&comma; when do we have time to reflect&quest;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<hr class&equals;"wp-block-separator has-alpha-channel-opacity" &sol;>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<h3 class&equals;"wp-block-heading has-medium-font-size">Section 5&colon; Memory vs&period; Misinformation<&sol;h3>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"has-small-font-size wp-block-paragraph">With great archiving power comes great risk&comma; especially when it comes to the spread of misinformation&period; The same platforms that preserve history are also rife with manipulation&comma; distortion&comma; and AI-generated content&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"has-small-font-size wp-block-paragraph">This complicates the reliability of digital archives&period; For example&colon;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<ul class&equals;"wp-block-list">&NewLine;<li class&equals;"has-small-font-size"><strong>Deepfakes and synthetic media<&sol;strong> are increasingly used to create false narratives&period; A fake video of a politician saying something inflammatory could go viral before fact-checkers intervene&comma; and still linger in the digital memory long after being debunked&period;<&sol;li>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<li class&equals;"has-small-font-size"><strong>Algorithmic reinforcement<&sol;strong> means that sensational or emotionally charged content is more likely to be preserved through shares&comma; even if it’s inaccurate&period;<&sol;li>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<li class&equals;"has-small-font-size"><strong>Context collapse<&sol;strong> occurs when old posts resurface without the surrounding historical moment&period; A tweet from 2012 can suddenly go viral in 2025&comma; detached from its original meaning&period;<&sol;li>&NewLine;<&sol;ul>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"has-small-font-size wp-block-paragraph">These challenges raise critical questions&colon; How do we separate truth from fiction in an archive where both are preserved side by side&quest; Who gets to verify history when the lines between user&comma; journalist&comma; and archivist are blurred&quest;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<hr class&equals;"wp-block-separator has-alpha-channel-opacity" &sol;>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<h3 class&equals;"wp-block-heading has-medium-font-size">Section 6&colon; The Role of Digital Archivists<&sol;h3>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<figure class&equals;"wp-block-image size-large is-resized"><img src&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;theword360&period;com&sol;wp-content&sol;uploads&sol;2025&sol;07&sol;kajetan-sumila-mis7syjThUU-unsplash-1024x683&period;jpg" alt&equals;"" class&equals;"wp-image-23380" style&equals;"aspect-ratio&colon;1&period;5&semi;width&colon;467px&semi;height&colon;auto" &sol;><&sol;figure>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"has-small-font-size wp-block-paragraph">Enter the new archivists&colon; journalists&comma; data scientists&comma; and digital humanists who are building the infrastructure to preserve social media content responsibly&period; Projects like&colon;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<ul class&equals;"wp-block-list">&NewLine;<li class&equals;"has-small-font-size"><strong>The Internet Archive<&sol;strong> and its Wayback Machine offer snapshots of web pages&comma; tweets&comma; and digital news&period;<&sol;li>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<li class&equals;"has-small-font-size"><strong>Documenting the Now<&sol;strong> helps activists and scholars ethically collect and preserve social media related to social justice movements&period;<&sol;li>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<li class&equals;"has-small-font-size"><strong>Harvard’s Berkman Klein Center<&sol;strong> examines how digital memory influences civic life and public policy&period;<&sol;li>&NewLine;<&sol;ul>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"has-small-font-size wp-block-paragraph">These organizations recognize that archiving isn’t just a technical process&semi; it’s also ethical and political&period; They ask&colon; What is worth saving&quest; How do we ensure consent&quest; And how do we protect people in vulnerable communities whose digital traces might put them at risk&quest;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<hr class&equals;"wp-block-separator has-alpha-channel-opacity" &sol;>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<h3 class&equals;"wp-block-heading has-medium-font-size">Section 7&colon; Digital Legacy and Personal Histories<&sol;h3>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"has-small-font-size wp-block-paragraph">Beyond public events&comma; social media archives also reshape personal memory&period; Photos&comma; messages&comma; and posts serve as digital diaries that chronicle everything from births and graduations to heartbreaks and political awakenings&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"has-small-font-size wp-block-paragraph">Platforms like Facebook even offer &&num;8220&semi;memories&&num;8221&semi; to resurface posts from years past&comma; creating an algorithmic curation of personal history&period; But this also introduces questions about&colon;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<ul class&equals;"wp-block-list">&NewLine;<li class&equals;"has-small-font-size"><strong>Grief and digital death&colon;<&sol;strong> What happens to our posts when we die&quest; Who manages our digital estate&quest;<&sol;li>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<li class&equals;"has-small-font-size"><strong>Selective memory&colon;<&sol;strong> Do the posts we choose to share accurately reflect who we were&comma; or who we wanted others to see&quest;<&sol;li>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<li class&equals;"has-small-font-size"><strong>Emotional impact&colon;<&sol;strong> The resurfacing of old posts can bring joy or pain&comma; often unprompted and without context&period;<&sol;li>&NewLine;<&sol;ul>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"has-small-font-size wp-block-paragraph">In this way&comma; social media is both a scrapbook and a mirror&comma; revealing not only what we lived through but how we wanted it to be remembered&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<hr class&equals;"wp-block-separator has-alpha-channel-opacity" &sol;>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<h3 class&equals;"wp-block-heading has-medium-font-size">Section 8&colon; Rewriting the Historical Canon<&sol;h3>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"has-small-font-size wp-block-paragraph">Social media archives are also forcing historians to rethink their methods&period; Where once footnotes and primary sources lived in physical documents&comma; now researchers must navigate memes&comma; comments&comma; screenshots&comma; and posts&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"has-small-font-size wp-block-paragraph">This shift is both liberating and overwhelming&period; The abundance of content allows for richer&comma; more nuanced historical narratives&comma; but it also demands new tools for analysis&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"has-small-font-size wp-block-paragraph">Historians are now&colon;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<ul class&equals;"wp-block-list">&NewLine;<li class&equals;"has-small-font-size"><strong>Using machine learning<&sol;strong> to detect patterns in hashtags or misinformation&period;<&sol;li>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<li class&equals;"has-small-font-size"><strong>Creating digital exhibits<&sol;strong> that include tweets&comma; videos&comma; and interactive timelines&period;<&sol;li>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<li class&equals;"has-small-font-size"><strong>Engaging with participatory history<&sol;strong>&comma; where users contribute personal stories to public memory projects&period;<&sol;li>&NewLine;<&sol;ul>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"has-small-font-size wp-block-paragraph">This is a revolution not only in content&comma; but in form&period; History is no longer a static text&semi; it’s a hyperlinked experience&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<hr class&equals;"wp-block-separator has-alpha-channel-opacity" &sol;>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<h3 class&equals;"wp-block-heading has-medium-font-size">Conclusion&colon; The Archive Is Us<&sol;h3>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"has-small-font-size wp-block-paragraph">In this age of digital traces&comma; the archive is no longer hidden in basement vaults or climate-controlled libraries&period; It’s in our phones&comma; our feeds&comma; our fingers&period; We are all archivists now&comma; choosing what to document&comma; what to delete&comma; what to share&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"has-small-font-size wp-block-paragraph">This comes with responsibility&period; As platforms evolve&comma; as data decays&comma; and as misinformation spreads&comma; the challenge is not just to preserve memory&comma; but to preserve it meaningfully and ethically&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"has-small-font-size wp-block-paragraph">Social media archives are not perfect&period; They are messy&comma; biased&comma; and incomplete&period; But they are also powerful&period; They have transformed who gets remembered&comma; how events are recorded&comma; and how truth is contested&period; They are the collective memory of our time and the raw material of the histories yet to be written&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"has-medium-font-size wp-block-paragraph"><strong>Reference<&sol;strong>s<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"has-small-font-size wp-block-paragraph">The Internet Archive&period; &lpar;n&period;d&period;&rpar;&period; <em>Wayback Machine<&sol;em>&period; <a class&equals;"" href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;archive&period;org">https&colon;&sol;&sol;archive&period;org<&sol;a><&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"has-small-font-size wp-block-paragraph">Documenting the Now&period; &lpar;n&period;d&period;&rpar;&period; <em>Ethical Social Media Archiving Tools &amp&semi; Practices<&sol;em>&period; <a class&equals;"" href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;docnow&period;io&sol;">https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;docnow&period;io&sol;<&sol;a><&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"has-small-font-size wp-block-paragraph">Berkman Klein Center for Internet &amp&semi; Society&period; &lpar;n&period;d&period;&rpar;&period; <em>Harvard University<&sol;em>&period; <a class&equals;"" href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;cyber&period;harvard&period;edu&sol;">https&colon;&sol;&sol;cyber&period;harvard&period;edu&sol;<&sol;a><&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"has-small-font-size wp-block-paragraph">Howard&comma; P&period; N&period;&comma; &amp&semi; Hussain&comma; M&period; M&period; &lpar;2011&rpar;&period; <em>The Role of Digital Media During the Arab Spring<&sol;em>&period; Brookings Institution&period; <a>https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;brookings&period;edu&sol;articles&sol;the-role-of-digital-media-during-the-arab-spring&sol;<&sol;a><&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"has-small-font-size wp-block-paragraph">Wong&comma; B&period; &lpar;2020&comma; July 28&rpar;&period; <em>How Black Lives Matter Used Social Media to Fight the Power<&sol;em>&period; The Guardian&period; <a class&equals;"" href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;theguardian&period;com&sol;world&sol;2020&sol;jul&sol;28&sol;black-lives-matter-social-media-protest">https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;theguardian&period;com&sol;world&sol;2020&sol;jul&sol;28&sol;black-lives-matter-social-media-protest<&sol;a><&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"has-small-font-size wp-block-paragraph">Hernandez&comma; J&period; C&period; &lpar;2022&comma; March 14&rpar;&period; <em>How TikTok Became a Tool for Ukraine’s War Effort<&sol;em>&period; NPR&period; <a>https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;npr&period;org&sol;2022&sol;03&sol;14&sol;1086363538&sol;ukraine-war-tiktok-propaganda<&sol;a><&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"has-small-font-size wp-block-paragraph">Dwyer&comma; C&period; &lpar;2021&comma; January 9&rpar;&period; <em>Capitol Rioters Used Social Media&period; The FBI Is Using It Too<&sol;em>&period; NPR&period; <a>https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;npr&period;org&sol;2021&sol;01&sol;09&sol;955465267&sol;capitol-rioters-used-social-media-the-fbi-is-using-it-too<&sol;a><&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"has-small-font-size wp-block-paragraph">Warzel&comma; C&period;&comma; &amp&semi; Conger&comma; K&period; &lpar;2020&comma; January 6&rpar;&period; <em>Deepfakes and the New Disinformation War<&sol;em>&period; The New York Times&period; <a class&equals;"" href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;nytimes&period;com&sol;interactive&sol;2020&sol;01&sol;06&sol;opinion&sol;deepfake-politics&period;html">https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;nytimes&period;com&sol;interactive&sol;2020&sol;01&sol;06&sol;opinion&sol;deepfake-politics&period;html<&sol;a><&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"has-small-font-size wp-block-paragraph">Murnane&comma; K&period; &lpar;2020&comma; October 6&rpar;&period; <em>What Happens to Our Digital Lives When We Die&quest;<&sol;em>&period; The Atlantic&period; <a>https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;theatlantic&period;com&sol;technology&sol;archive&sol;2020&sol;10&sol;what-happens-our-digital-lives-when-we-die&sol;616818&sol;<&sol;a><&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"has-small-font-size wp-block-paragraph">Olivia Santoro is a writer and communications creative focused on media&comma; digital culture&comma; and social impact&comma; particularly where communication intersects with society&period; She’s passionate about exploring how technology&comma; storytelling&comma; and social platforms shape public perception and drive meaningful change&period; Olivia also writes on sustainability in fashion&comma; emerging trends in entertainment&comma; and stories that reflect Gen Z voices in today’s fast-changing world&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"has-small-font-size wp-block-paragraph"><strong>Connect with her here&colon;<&sol;strong> <a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;linkedin&period;com&sol;in&sol;olivia-santoro-1b1b02255&sol;">https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;linkedin&period;com&sol;in&sol;olivia-santoro-1b1b02255&sol;<&sol;a><&sol;p>&NewLine;

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