In Britain there was “alley Twitter” and “Facebook street”

In Britain there was “alley Twitter” and “Facebook street”

Users of social networks publish photos strange street signs.

On the streets of British Oxford, new signs on the buildings. Instead of the usual names of streets and lanes there now adorn the names of popular social media and phenomena associated with them. For example, “self-journey”, “the alley Twitter” and “Facebook street”. In addition, their place on the plates got “likes”, “hashtags,” “followers” and other phenomena from the “life” of social networks.

#socialmediagig #oxfordstreetsigns More signs. pic.twitter.com/9Tt7TVYpMg

— A34 (@Athirty4) May 8, 2018

The author of unusual signs became an artist working under the pseudonym A34. According to the British, he created fake plates, “which, however, look very realistic, just as all social media.”

Wood Farm, Oxford. #socialmediagig #oxfordstreetsigns pic.twitter.com/bF1iFCO286

— A34 (@Athirty4) May 8, 2018

Local residents and visitors to the city idea with a new name, apparently, very much. A couple of days unknown has managed to steal a couple of tablets. Apparently, as a souvenir.

#oxfordstreetsigns #socialmeidagig pic.twitter.com/0xCkkFbGHU

— A34 (@Athirty4) May 8, 2018

I’ve created my signs so that they appear fake upon close inspection; however, once they are photographed, they look three dimensional and look unquestionably real. It’s an illusion, in the same way that much of social media is an illusion. #illusion #oxfordstreetsigns pic.twitter.com/I0Fyd75DwE

— A34 (@Athirty4) May 9, 2018

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