Where is that plane?!

That's the question we've all been asking since Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 mysteriously vanished after taking off on March 8.

Seeking answers, we've collectively turned to the Internet.

Twitter has turned into a near-constant stream of news, rumors, and theories, many tweeted with the hashtag #MH370. In fact, nearly four million tweets have been sent with #MH370 since March 8, according to Topsy.

On Reddit, users have set up a comprehensive thread on the r/news subreddit, where an ongoing post (here's part 14) dedicated to sharing the latest information remains "stickied" at the top of the page. As of March 16, it now has its own subreddit, too: r/MH370.

A Wikipedia page for the missing plane was established less than eight hours after the flight disappeared, and has grown from just 85 words to well over 4,000, and has been edited thousands of times.

And Tomnod, a digital mapmaking company's platform for crowdsourcing satellite imagery, 3 million volunteers are scouring 26,000km of satellite imagery, searching for signs of debris. The company is continually adding new imagery to search.

Beutler Ink, a PR agency that specializes in visual graphics, sent along the infographic below detailing the online search for Malaysia Airlines Flight 370.