English

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Etymology

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From click +‎ -ocracy, a neologism in the form of democracy.

Noun

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clickocracy (plural clickocracies)

  1. (neologism) the role of the internet and algorithmic media in elections and governance.
    • 2002, Matt Haig, How Come You Don't Have an E-business Strategy?: The Essential Guide to Online Business, Kogan Page Publishers, published 2002, page 3:
      Owing to the 'clickocracy' of the Internet, a Web site can set up shop with a miniscule[sic] budget and end up competing with the big guns.
    • 2008 April 1, Jose Antonio Vargas, “Campaign.USA: With the Internet Comes a New Political 'Clickocracy'”, in Washington Post:
      Like it or not, we now belong to a clickocracy -- one nation under Google, with video and e-mail for all.
    • 2012, Michael Schudson and Katherine Fink, "The Algorithm Method: Making news decisions in a clickocracy," Columbia Journalism Review, January/February 2012
      To be sure, algorithmic media also require audience participation—but only in an automated, aggregated clickocracy.
    • 2013, Justin Cash, The Rise of Clickocracy: Politics for a Digital Age, Lulu, page 143:
      Also, and rather critically, in the new world of clickocracy, "my vote doesn't make a difference" makes the erroneous assumption that voting is the only expression of political will now available to us.