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A list of all pages that have property "Worked well" with value "On a positive note, Stockholmers have used social media, especially Twitter, not only to provide massive support to those affected, but also to coordinate various efforts: In a tweet posted at 4:44 p.m., Jenny Nguyen, a Swedish law student, asked “Could we collect all who are opening their doors in Stockholm under one hashtag ‘#openstockholm’?”. Thus, like the hashtags that were suggested to enable support during other attacks (#PorteOuverte in Paris 2015, #openhouse in Brussels 2016; #opendoors in Nice 2016, #offenetür in Munich 2016, #roomformanchester in Manchester 2017 or #bedinbarcelona in Barcelona 2017), #openstockholm quickly attracted massive engagement and initiated a mobilization that thousands joined: By the end of the day of the attack, tweets with #openstockholm had been sent or retweeted over 21,000 times – a number which rose to 47,000 during the first five days after the incident. Initially, the hashtag was used to highlight safe locations and emergency shelters, but it was gradually expanded to share information about carpooling (by people posting their routes, times and destinations of transport), childcare and safety, food availability, shareable or open Wi-Fi connections to relieve congested mobile networks, etc. Several users also used the hashtag to update the state of knowledge about the event (e.g. the number of victims), to reflect official information from the authorities, or to call for not posting graphic images of victims or deliberately spreading rumours. Quantitative analyses of the tweets also revealed that the majority of posts were classified as rational reactions (such as concrete offers of help or information updates), but about one fifth of #openstockholm posts were symbolic reactions to the events, primarily expressions of appreciation for the helpers and (national) pride (e.g., “Proud of you who are opening homes.”, “So proud of this country.”).". Since there have been only a few results, also nearby values are displayed.

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    • Crowd-Engagement During Terror-Attack  + (On a positive note, Stockholmers have usedOn a positive note, Stockholmers have used social media, especially Twitter, not only to provide massive support to those affected, but also to coordinate various efforts: In a tweet posted at 4:44 p.m., Jenny Nguyen, a Swedish law student, asked “Could we collect all who are opening their doors in Stockholm under one hashtag ‘#openstockholm’?”. </br></br>Thus, like the hashtags that were suggested to enable support during other attacks (#PorteOuverte in Paris 2015, #openhouse in Brussels 2016; #opendoors in Nice 2016, #offenetür in Munich 2016, #roomformanchester in Manchester 2017 or #bedinbarcelona in Barcelona 2017), #openstockholm quickly attracted massive engagement and initiated a mobilization that thousands joined: By the end of the day of the attack, tweets with #openstockholm had been sent or retweeted over 21,000 times – a number which rose to 47,000 during the first five days after the incident.</br></br>Initially, the hashtag was used to highlight safe locations and emergency shelters, but it was gradually expanded to share information about carpooling (by people posting their routes, times and destinations of transport), childcare and safety, food availability, shareable or open Wi-Fi connections to relieve congested mobile networks, etc. Several users also used the hashtag to update the state of knowledge about the event (e.g. the number of victims), to reflect official information from the authorities, or to call for not posting graphic images of victims or deliberately spreading rumours. Quantitative analyses of the tweets also revealed that the majority of posts were classified as rational reactions (such as concrete offers of help or information updates), but about one fifth of #openstockholm posts were symbolic reactions to the events, primarily expressions of appreciation for the helpers and (national) pride (e.g., “Proud of you who are opening homes.”, “So proud of this country.”).ing homes.”, “So proud of this country.”).)