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The study of how large populations behave in purely digital spaces—social media platforms, online forums, virtual worlds—where physical proximity is replaced by algorithmic connection. Digital masses are different from physical masses in fundamental ways: they're always on, globally distributed, and shaped by code rather than architecture. The psychology involves understanding how anonymous masses can coordinate (flash mobs, meme wars), how digital crowds can be both more cruel (disinhibition effect) and more kind (global support networks), and how algorithms curate masses into echo chambers that reinforce shared beliefs. Digital masses are the new normal; most of us are part of several, often without realizing it.
Psychology of the Digital Masses Example: "He studied the psychology of the digital masses after his tweet went viral. Suddenly, he was at the center of a crowd that existed nowhere but acted everywhere—thousands of strangers with opinions, emotions, and expectations. The experience was exhilarating and terrifying. He'd never met them, but they shaped his next week completely. Digital masses are real, even if you can't see them."
by Dumu The Void February 16, 2026
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