Title
Open Portals or Closed Gates? Channeling Content on the World Wide Web
Author(s)
Eszter Hargittai Eszter Hargittai (Princeton University)
Abstract
This paper explores what the tension between information abundance and attention scarcity implies for the diversity of information accessible to users of the World Wide Web. Due to limited user attention, there is a role for gatekeepers in the online content market. Sites that catalog Web content and primarily present themselves as content categorization services are identified as the gatekeepers in the new information age. Exploring the mechanisms by which they organize content is essential to understanding how user attention is allocated to information available on the Web. Theories about media content diversity are delineated to suggest what we may expect with respect to content diversity online. Methods for future empirical investigation are suggested. Finally, the policy implications of the argument are presented.
Creation Date
2000-05
Section URL ID
CACPS
Paper Number
10
URL
https://culturalpolicy.princeton.edu/sites/culturalpolicy/files/wp10_hargittai.pdf
File Function
Jel
Z11, L86
Keyword(s)
Suppress
false
Series
6