A
virtual community is a social network of individuals who interact
through specific social media, potentially crossing geographical and
political boundaries in order to pursue mutual interests or goals. One
of the most pervasive types of virtual community include social
networking services, which consist of various online communities.
The
term virtual community is attributed to the book of the same title by
Howard Rheingold, published in 1993. The book, which could be considered
a social enquiry, putting the research in the social sciences,
discussed his adventures on The WELL and onward into a range of
computer-mediated communication and social groups, broadening it to
information science. The technologies included Usenet, MUDs (Multi-User
Dungeon) and their derivatives MUSHes and MOOs, Internet Relay Chat
(IRC), chat rooms and electronic mailing lists; the World Wide Web as we
know it today was not yet used by many people. Rheingold pointed out
the potential benefits for personal psychological well-being, as well as
for society at large, of belonging to such a group.
These
virtual communities all encourage interaction, sometimes focusing
around a particular interest, or sometimes just to communicate. Some
virtual communities do both. They allow users to interact over a shared
passion, whether it be through message boards, chat rooms, social
networking sites, or virtual worlds.
A
virtual community is a community of people sharing common interests,
ideas, and feelings over the Internet or other collaborative networks. A
possible inventor of this term and one of its first proponents was
Howard Rheingold, who created one of the first major Internet
communities, called "The Well." In his book, The Virtual Community ,
Rheingold defines virtual communities as social aggregations that emerge
from the Internet when enough people carry on public discussions long
enough and with sufficient human feeling to form webs of personal
relationships in cyberspace .
Virtual
communities might be thought of as subgroups within Marshall McLuhan's
notion of cyberspace as a "global village." Before the Web, virtual
communities existed on bulletin board services ( BBS ) and many still
do. Some virtual communities or facilitators of them use the metaphor of
a coffee house or something similar to help users visualize the
community. In general, there are two kinds of communication among
virtual community members: message postings and real-time chat. Usenet
newsgroups are an example of the former. Many Web sites, such as
Geocities, foster subject information exchanges. For real-time chat,
Internet Relay Chat ( IRC ) is a system used by many Web sites that
foster virtual communities.
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