‘glitchr’, a project undertaken by lithuanian laimonas zakas, uses 
unicode characters to exploit programming bugs of common web 
destinations (including facebook, tumblr, and google), resulting in 
visually interesting textual digital art that overwrites the 
standardized formatting generally used by these sites. The process 
differs from simple ASCII art in that it involves using non-character 
entities to effectively ‘break’ layout engines on website servers, 
resulting in text overlain on what would normally be comment sections or 
search bars. searching for ‘glitchr’ on google already showcases zakas’s 
work, with a slanted double line appearing over his page results. 
Besides its visual interest, ‘glitchr’ holds a kind of intrigue for the 
way in which it subverts the clean lines and strict infrastructure of 
much of the internet. exposing vulnerabilities in the code, even where 
the ‘glitches’ are harmless, destabilizes the ‘myth’ of transparent 
representation and order, reminding viewers that the ‘real’ nature of 
each webpage is the thousands of lines of its source code. zakas notes 
that he suspects his work is also used by companies to debug their own 
code, as ‘tricks’ he once highlighted, like the use of animated pictures 
in thumbnails on facebook, have since been disabled.

http://www.siusoon.com/dat/2012/03/31/glitchr-in-facebook-by-laimonas-zakas/#

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