Digital Semiotics is edited by Alon Friedman and Martin Thellefsen. We publish working research, theoretical notes, and critical commentary at the intersection of semiotics, information science, and artificial intelligence.
Our posts aim to develop the conceptual vocabulary of digital semiotics — examining how signs function in computational environments, how AI-generated outputs acquire meaning and authority, and how knowledge is organized, trusted, and interpreted in digital culture.
This is not a space for finished arguments. It is a record of inquiry in progress — open to revision, extension, and response. Scholars working in semiotics, AI studies, and information.