Category
page 121st-century neologisms
battle royale game
video game genre with last-man-standing gameplay
dead Internet theory
conspiracy theory about the World Wide Web
ghosting
practice of suddenly breaking off a relationship or friendship with someone
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BreadTube
BreadTube, also called LeftTube, is a loose and informal group of online personalities who create video content, including video essays and livestreams, from socialist, social democratic, communist, anarchist, and other left-wing perspectives. BreadTube creators generally post videos on YouTube that are discussed on other online platforms, such as Reddit. Many BreadTube content creators are crowdfunded, and their channels often serve as introductions to left-wing politics for young viewers. BreadTube creators align with collectivist modes of governance, while opposing the alt-right and far-rig
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cottagecore
alt=Photograph of Anne Hathaway's cottage, Stratford-upon-Avon.|thumb|Anne Hathaway (wife of Shakespeare)|Anne Hathaway's cottage in [[Stratford-upon-Avon exemplifies the traditional style cottagecore prioritises. The garden designed by Ellen Willmott contains many herbs and flowers mentioned in Shakespeare's plays.]]
Cottagecore is an internet aesthetic and subculture concerned with an idealised rural lifestyle. The aesthetic centres on traditional and vernacular architecture, clothing, interior design and crafts. Based primarily on the visual and material culture of rural Europe, cottagecore
allosexuality
Allosexuality is the ability to experience typical patterns of sexual attraction, in contrast with people on the asexual spectrum. For an individual who experiences sexual attraction, this identity is expressed as allosexual, sometimes shortened to allo; synonymous terms include zedsexual, or simply sexual.
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post-internet
thumb|"Chernobyl", from the "Computer Viruses" series, by Stepan Ryabchenko (2011).
Post-Internet is a loosely defined 21st-century art movement that generally referred to contemporary art concerning the concept of the Internet no longer being perceived as a novelty in society. In 2006, artist Marisa Olson coined the term "postinternet art" to describe her work. The term was then adopted by writer Gene McHugh who authored a blog titled "Post-Internet" in 2009, which further discussed and popularized the concept into a movement growing out of previous Internet Art.
Internet aesthetic
visual art style
technofeudalism
Category:21st-century neologisms
Category:Economics neologisms
Category:Feudalism
Category:Internet-related controversies
Category:Political neologisms
Waifu
thumb|right|upright=1.2|An illustration of a female anime character, representative of the type of characters commonly referred to as waifus by fans
Blook
A blook (a portmanteau of blog and book) is a printed book that contains content first published on a blog, web fiction platform, or social media service. While the term originated in the early 2000s to describe the "blog-to-book" phenomenon, it has expanded to encompass the broader industry trend of "digital-to-print" transition, where traditional publishers acquire webnovels, webcomics, and serial fiction that have demonstrated market viability through online metrics.