36 Million Language Pairs

This article provides an overview on some of the key aspects that relate to the co-evolution of languages and its associated content in the Internet environment. A focus on such a co-evolution is pertinent as the evolution of languages in the Internet environment can be better understood if the deve...

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Main Author: Thomas Petzold
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ubiquity Press 2012-07-01
Series:Cultural Science
Online Access:https://culturalscience.org/articles/49
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spelling doaj-f1b838d291a948c392a8b80c5f1b4c592020-11-24T21:39:40ZengUbiquity PressCultural Science1836-04162012-07-015210611910.5334/csci.494936 Million Language PairsThomas PetzoldThis article provides an overview on some of the key aspects that relate to the co-evolution of languages and its associated content in the Internet environment. A focus on such a co-evolution is pertinent as the evolution of languages in the Internet environment can be better understood if the development of its existing and emerging content, that is, the content in the respective language, is taken into consideration. By doing so, this article examines two related aspects: the governance of languages at critical sites of the Internet environment, including ICANN, Wikipedia and Google Translate. Following on from this examination, the second part outlines how the co-evolution of languages and associated content in the Internet environment extends policy-making related to linguistic pluralism. It is argued that policies which centre on language availability in the Internet environment must shift their focus to the dynamics of available content instead. The notion of language pairs as a new regime of intersection for both languages and content is discussed to introduce an extended understanding of the uses of linguistic pluralism in the Internet environment. The ultimate extrapolation of such an enhanced approach, it is argued, centres less on 6,000 languages but, instead, on 36 million language pairs. This article describes how such a powerful resource evolves in the Internet environment.https://culturalscience.org/articles/49
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Thomas Petzold
spellingShingle Thomas Petzold
36 Million Language Pairs
Cultural Science
author_facet Thomas Petzold
author_sort Thomas Petzold
title 36 Million Language Pairs
title_short 36 Million Language Pairs
title_full 36 Million Language Pairs
title_fullStr 36 Million Language Pairs
title_full_unstemmed 36 Million Language Pairs
title_sort 36 million language pairs
publisher Ubiquity Press
series Cultural Science
issn 1836-0416
publishDate 2012-07-01
description This article provides an overview on some of the key aspects that relate to the co-evolution of languages and its associated content in the Internet environment. A focus on such a co-evolution is pertinent as the evolution of languages in the Internet environment can be better understood if the development of its existing and emerging content, that is, the content in the respective language, is taken into consideration. By doing so, this article examines two related aspects: the governance of languages at critical sites of the Internet environment, including ICANN, Wikipedia and Google Translate. Following on from this examination, the second part outlines how the co-evolution of languages and associated content in the Internet environment extends policy-making related to linguistic pluralism. It is argued that policies which centre on language availability in the Internet environment must shift their focus to the dynamics of available content instead. The notion of language pairs as a new regime of intersection for both languages and content is discussed to introduce an extended understanding of the uses of linguistic pluralism in the Internet environment. The ultimate extrapolation of such an enhanced approach, it is argued, centres less on 6,000 languages but, instead, on 36 million language pairs. This article describes how such a powerful resource evolves in the Internet environment.
url https://culturalscience.org/articles/49
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