Convencida de que estamos ante una nueva fase de la socialidad online, la autora explica cómo tecnologías y usuarios coevolucionan, pero también cómo los medios conectivos avanzan cada vez más sobre las relaciones humanas, codificándolas como datos y convirtiéndolas en mercancías que producen valor. En este punto, pone la lupa sobre algunos desarrollos preocupantes: así, observa que la conectividad está organizada alrededor de opciones como “me gusta” o el “botón-T” de Twitter, inventos que presentan de manera sencilla algoritmos complejos que codifican una inmensa cantidad de datos sobre gustos, preferencias y afectos, una enorme masa de información con un valor comercial inusitado para usos políticos o publicitarios. Por eso los medios sociales privilegian, ante todo, la popularidad, medida por la concentración de conexiones, que en muchos casos lleva a borrar la distinción entre la expresión personal y la autopromoción, y a mercantilizar la identidad propia como un bien que hay que vender o consumir. Lejos de los apocalípticos o integrados que sólo perciben conjuntos estables, este libro entiende los medios conectivos como parte de un ecosistema tecnocultural de carácter cambiante, atravesado por tensiones internas, como la contradicción entre sus propias promesas de transparencia y participación, por un lado, y sus modelos de negocios o su resistencia a los controles legales, por el otro. Constituye, sin duda, una contribución única al debate público sobre los medios digitales, aportando preguntas y argumentos que todavía no se escuchan con la atención que merecen.
*Update* re-read this 2 years later (for a class I teach). Still love it & need to go back and incorporate it into some of my current research.
It's been a long time since I've written "yes" and "!!!" in the margins of a book as frequently as this one. If you study social media at all, I highly recommend this book. She does a great job mapping out the complex nuances and broader contexts of the contemporary social media ecosystem. I really appreciate her organized & conceptual model of analysis.
The author clearly presents the history of six social media platforms in order to show their interconnected nature and determine what lessons can be learned for future sites and connections.
He quedado más decepcionado de las redes sociales después de leer este libro . Desde un principio he sido partidario de usarlas no sólo para afianzar las amistades y la lista de conocidos sino para promover y compartir información útil. Twitter era concebido así en un principio, pero pronto todas las plataformas adoptaron los mismos criterios de socialidad: popularidad, estandarización, inmediatez, publicidad, comercialización, tendencias etc. Es decepcionante observar como las redes sociales de prestan a la corrupción del debate público, lo extreman en visiones militantes o en simple ignorancia. Cómo escapar de tanta falsedad y banalidad. Hay que tener un criterio formado y aún así pierdes el horizonte en un mar de "información" de dudosa calidad y cooptada por "líderes de opinión" que en la realidad offline suelen coincidir con los liderazgos de farándula, moda o carisma. Sin duda un interesante libro que permite formar un juicio crítico de los medios conectivos.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
This book was a fascinating, although semi heavy read. The author presented a 6-fold model to dissect a given social media platform, and then applied this model to Facebook, Twitter, Flickr, YouTube and Wikipedia. For each "microsystem" she also reassembled, or drew together a new perspective on each case. The model, inspired by Bruno Latour's Actor-Network Theory (ANT) and Manuel Castell's political economy, felt useful to me as a reader. However, it was quite difficult to follow the logic of the reassemblage. In the end van Dijck painted a picture of the whole ecosystem, the culture of connectivity, as emerging from the interlinkedness of the aforementioned as well as other platforms together.
My key takeaway from the book was this: Social media platforms recode, recast, or engineer people's social interactions and connectedness into measurable, digital connectivity, which has an effect on how people interact with each other. The effect follows the business imperatives (or other factors such as owners' interests) of said platforms and not necessarily what the people see as moral, useful or meaningful.
One thing that bugged me was van Dijck's use of the expression "coding technologies". I wasn't sure whether she was meaning different ways to "code" a body of text, as in qualitative research methods, or programming. I decided to think "software technologies" instead. But I had missed the point. What she refers to is the technologies of coding (or casting) social activities into computational architectures. I was about to justify one-star drop from 5 to 4 by this, but now I can't, so let's just say that the only reason I don't give 5/5 stars is that the book was not mind-blowing.
But when Wikipedia was characterized as an "adhocracy", I laughed :)
A very good book on Social Media Analysis, as this book written in 2013, therefore it already captures Web 2.0 phenomenon. It used "platforms as microsystem perspective" that based on ANT and political economy. The analysis based on FB, Twitter, Flickr, Google, and Wiki. I think the most important thing from this book is the argument on "Connectivity", basically, Social Media will not replace "traditional communication" e.g phone, email and "traditional entertainment" e.g book, movie, but creating a new layer of interaction which a complement of a currently available form of exchanging information.
I think this methodology is brilliant. I loved her critical look at the systems and cycles that develop social media.
It is a textbook in the sense that it’s densely written. I would have loved more narrative in her analogy. It’s also incredibly outdated. My hope is that she will be motivated to write a new book using these same methodology. It’s sincerely dope. Get thru the techy language and you will have a much better vocabulary around the science, technology, and business operations involved with social media.
A worthwhile book covering the emergence of social media, paying attention more to the issue of monetizing user data, and the conflict between platform owners and users. However, the book was a slog to read through - perhaps because some of it reiterated technical issues I know about, or because of the structure (both can be seen as str0ng points: the first fills in gaps of knowledge for those less knowledgeable on the subject, the other facilitates the independence of chapters, which is useful if somebody wants to just read one chapter).
A good start for anyone who wants to understand social media from a sociological perspective. The beginning of the book seems to be a bit dry with a lot of theories and paradigms, but the book gets more and more interesting when the author uses this framework to scrutinize 5 major social network sites in the following chapters. My only wish is that the author wrote this book in 2018, not 2013, so she could provide analysis with up-to-date functions and changes in those social networks.
Pretty good albeit somewhat outdated. Also at times somewhat superficial, focusing too much on the biographical details (so to say) of various platforms rather than their implications for sociality. Still, an important read.
Insightful, with well-articulated arguments that invite serious reflection about the ways in and through which we (and those around us) engage with social networks.
Although there were some insightful points, this book is vastly outdated considering how far ai and social media has grown within the last decade since publication
pure academia | the writer invents unnecessary polysyllabic words instead of using clear and concise english | perhaps because she is not a native speaker | the book bored this reader to sobs ||
the book gets one star simply for its jacket design | which is unnecessary because i read via an epub ||