Internet
forums are the longest established form of online media. They most commonly
exist around specific topics and interests, for example cars or music. Each
discussion in a forum is known as a thread, and many different threads can be
active simultaneously.
This makes
forums good places to find and engage in a variety of detailed discussions.
They are often built into websites as an added feature, but some exist as
stand-alone entities. Forums can be places for lively, vociferous debate, for seeking
advice on a subject, for sharing news, for flirting, or simply for whiling away
time with idle chat. In other words, their huge variety reflects that of
face-to-face conversations.
The sites are
moderated by an administrator, whose role it is to remove unsuitable posts or
spam. However, a moderator will not lead or guide the discussion. This is a
major difference between forums and blogs. Blogs have a clear owner, whereas a
forum’s threads are started by its members.
Forums have a
strong sense of community. Some are very enclosed, existing as ‘islands’ of
online social activity with little or no connection to other forms of social
media. This may be because forums were around long before the term ‘social
media’ was coined, and in advance of any of the other types of community we
associate with the term.
In any event,
they remain hugely popular, often with membership in the hundreds of thousands.
Forum search engine BoardTracker
monitors over 61 million conversation threads across almost 40,000 forums8, and
it is by no means a comprehensive index.
Source: What is Social Media? (Antony Mayfield, iCrossing) e-book
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