Distortion Social
Transcription
Distortion Social
Social Distortion What do we do with the artifacts of digital living? Meghan Dougherty, PhD Loyola University, Chicago Annette Markham, PhD Aarhus University, Denmark IIPC, April 27, 2015 We move around online We leave digital traces We follow certain paths, ignore others We create new paths (everyone else does, too) We make sense of things through these paths We tend to think that this sense we make is reality. But there’s a lot we don’t see. Reality is far more complicated. “Gee, you sure do want people to know what music you like! My News Feed is filled with posts like, “Sue’s listening to Bruce Springsteen on Spotify!” or “Sue’s listening to Some Playlist on Spotify!” Why do you do that?” Sue was confused. Her friend seemed to think Sue was a prolific Facebook user when Sue hadn’t logged in or posted an update for several months…..” (Participant 365, 2013) Nothing I did in the entire hour I recorded myself was actually…accomplished anything. AT ALL. Seriously!? To think—I do this for hours a day. …It is just a bit…sad how glued I am to the computer. I set my nerves aside and decidedly tap him firmly on his chest. Now I can see him more closely: his eyes—still dark, still meeting my gaze—are a deep brown and half shaded by intensely long lashes. He is so cute. Before I touch him again, I decide that I definitely need to have something to talk about—that is, I can only stare at him for so long before I should probably say something. But what? Does it even matter what I say? After what feels like an eternity, my indecision gets the best of me. I chicken out. Instead of initiating an interaction, I shut down the screen and slip my iPhone into the pocket of my jeans. "The tyranny of the quantifiable is partly the failure of language and discourse to describe more complex subtle, and fluid phenomena, as well as the failure of those who shape opinions and make decisions to understand and value these slipperier things.” Rebecca Solnit, Men Explain Things to Me, 2014 (pg. 59) “The web is the most successful information architecture…it’s all about linking content.” “We need to understand the web. The people are central, and if we didn’t fill it with content, it’d die. The technology doesn’t shape it, we do by using it.” “Web pages are made for humans to communicate with humans rendered through a computer. The code has no meaning.” The Onion, “Internet Archaeologists Find Ruins of ‘Friendster’ Civilization” http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7mFJdOsjJ0k&feature=kp Social Distortion What do we do with the artifacts of digital living? Meghan Dougherty, PhD Loyola University, Chicago Annette Markham, PhD Aarhus University, Denmark IIPC, April 27, 2015