cyberflaneur

cyberflaneur
n.
A person who surfs the web with no purpose beyond curiosity and inquisitiveness.
cyberflaneurism n.
cyberflanerie n.
Example Citations:
Intrigued, I set out to discover what happened to the cyberflâneur. While I quickly found other contemporaneous commentators who believed that flânerie would flourish online, the sad state of today's Internet suggests that they couldn't have been more wrong. Cyberflâneurs are few and far between, while the very practice of cyberflânerie seems at odds with the world of social media.
—Evgeny Morozov, " The Death of the Cyberflâneur: http://www.nytimes.com/2012/02/05/opinion/Sunday/the-death-of-the-cyberflaneur.html?pagewanted=all," The New York Times, February 4, 2012
The practices of cyberflaneurism and cyberphotography differ significantly from traditional flaneurism in this regard. Where the 18th-and 19th-century flaneur sought to evaluate and describe modern transformations in work, politics and public life more generally and the collective consciousness given rise to by these changes, cyberflaneurs-cum-street-photographers inhabit an environment shaped by an ever-increasing publicization of private life.
—" Loitering in cyberspace: Cheryl Sourkes' takes snapshots of the web's digital citizenry: http://goliath.ecnext.com/coms2/gi_0199-6819207/Loitering-in-cyberspace-Cheryl-Sourkes.html," C: International Contemporary Art, June 22, 2007
Earliest Citation:
I see the value of cyberspace not in the replacement of our cities, but in its potential to rekindle our fondness for and fascination with urban environs. The attraction that it exerts on the millions that stroll through its maze of information might be used to reinvigorate our cities. Cyberflaneurs have become captivated with the Internet's ready supply of huge amounts of information that they can access at all times of day or night.
—Udo Greinacher in Nan Ellin (ed.), Architecture of Fear: http://books.google.com/books?id=v4OWo8r8IYsC&pg=PA293&dq=%22cyberflaneurs%22, Princeton Architectural Press, February 1, 1997
Notes:
The word flaneur, a saunterer or "man about town" (there's an old-fashioned phrase for you) comes from the French flâner, "to saunter idly", and first appeared in English around 1854. A cyberflaneur is also known as a virtual flaneur, a term that also dates to 1997 (and in fact its first use is in the same essay as the earliest cite for cyberflaneur; see page 290).
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Look at other dictionaries:

  • cyberflaneur — noun A person who idly surfs the Internet The attraction that it exerts on the millions that stroll through its maze of information might be used to reinvigorate our cities. Cyberflaneurs have become captivated with the Internets ready supply of… …   Wiktionary

  • Internet — altmetrics ambient findability arachnerd bid shielding bitcom black hole resort blog blogosphere …   New words

  • People — 99er adultescent agritourist alpha earner alpha geek alpha girl alpha pup altruistic donor …   New words

  • clickprint — n. A pattern of web surfing behavior that uniquely identifies the person doing the surfing. Example Citations: Your mouse is leaving tracks all over the Net By observing the online behavior of a Web surfer for as few as three sessions on the… …   New words

  • clickstream — n. The virtual path a person takes while surfing the World Wide Web. Example Citation: Compete.com ... licenses clickstream data from ISPs to find out what more than 8 million active Internet users visiting 200,000 plus sites worldwide are up to …   New words

  • cyberbalkanization — (sy.bur.bawl.kuh.ni.ZAY.shun) n. The division of the Internet into narrowly focused groups of like minded individuals who dislike or have little patience for outsiders. Also: cyber balkanization. cyberbalkans n. Example Citations: The Internet… …   New words

  • egosurfing — pp. Using a search engine to locate and read pages, posts, articles, and other online content that mentions your name. egosurf v. Example Citation: Are you curious to see where your name appears online? If so, you might have tried asking your… …   New words

  • filter bubble — n. Search results, recommendations, and other online data that have been filtered to match your interests, thus preventing you from seeing data outside of those interests. Example Citations: Those same kind of surprises don t seem to happen to me …   New words

  • nooksurfer — n. A person who frequents only a limited number of Internet sites. Example Citation: Nooksurfer. (n.) Someone who only occasionally dives into the Web. It also means someone who visits perhaps one or two newsgroups. Jargon 2.0, Spokesman Review,… …   New words

  • splinternet — n. The internet splintered into multiple segments, streams, or classes based on factors such as cost, speed, platform, or political motivations. Example Citations: Each new device has its own ad networks, format, and technology. Each new social… …   New words

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