photolurker

photolurker
n.
A person who obsessively and anonymously browses strangers' photos posted to online photo-sharing sites.
photolurking pp.
Example Citations:
But perhaps most disturbing of all was the detection of a phenomenon known as "photolurking", which involves an obsession with browsing the online photo albums of complete strangers.
Since the popularity of photo-sharing sites exploded, the lives of snap-happy citizen journalists have been there for the lurking. And like the experience of Robin Williams' tragic photo developer in One Hour Photo, happy family photos offer the perfect escapism from an unpleasant reality. ...
Perhaps the photolurkers aren't entirely to blame. Some photographers are posting their most private moments online, without any password protection, for all the world to see. It's not as if lurkers are hiding behind a bush taking pictures at your family gathering.
—"Online snappers told to beware 'photolurkers," The Guardian, January 23, 2007
Web users known as "photolurkers" are flocking to picture album sites to snoop on complete strangers, according to researchers.
The growing phenomenon has been created by the boom in photologs which allow people to share pictures online with family and friends.
Anonymous visitors are also looking at the images in cyberspace but choose not to leave any messages behind in the optional message boards.
—Kim Pilling, "New obsessions as web users snoop on family albums," Press Association Newsfile, January 22, 2007
Earliest Citation:
Then there are photolog sites like Flickr. While most of us would rather die than be caught surreptitiously browsing through someone else's photos, there need be no such qualms about the private pics people put up on these sites. Haliyana Khalid and Alan Dix at Lancaster University in the UK have studied this new practice of "photolurking". Most people they interviewed who used Flickr and similar sites spent time each day browsing albums owned by people they had never met. They do this for emotional kicks, Khalid and Dix suggest: flicking through someone else's wedding photos, for example, allows people to daydream about their own nuptials.
—Richard Fisher, "Just can't get e-nough," New Scientist, December 20, 2006
Related Words: Categories:

New words. 2013.

Игры ⚽ Поможем решить контрольную работу

Look at other dictionaries:

  • 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

  • Photography — cinemagraph crop digi necker digital dieting documentary style ego wall fan edit fauxtography …   New words

  • fauxtography — (foh.TAWG.ruh.fee) n. The practice of creating faked photographs, usually by manipulating the images with software. fauxtographer n. Example Citations: The illusionists of fauxtography have created a powerful tool for propaganda. Faking a photo… …   New words

  • flat daddy — n. An enlarged, usually life sized photograph of a deployed soldier, used to comfort that soldier s children, spouse, or relatives. Also: flat mommy. Example Citations: To make your daughter feel good at home, you can tape your husband as he… …   New words

  • peoplerazzi — n. People who take pictures of celebrities in situations that are newsworthy or shocking, particularly to post those pictures online. Example Citations: A new word Peoplerazzi has been coined to describe citizen journalists who focus on… …   New words

  • smartphoneography — n. Photography using a smartphone s built in camera. Also: smartphone ography, smartphonography. Example Citations: Taking pictures with a smartphone has become so popular, it even has its own name: iPhoneography, or smartphoneography for those… …   New words

  • velcroid — n. A person who remains in close proximity to an important leader, particularly during photo sessions, to achieve increased media exposure. Example Citations: And if you ve ever noticed a person who always seems to be hanging around someone more… …   New words

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”