Co-Creating Birth and Death on Social Media

Tama Leaver
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引用次数: 8

Abstract

While social media is, by definition, about connecting multiple people, many discussions about social media platforms and practices presume that accounts and profiles are managed by individual users with the agency to make fully-informed choices about their activities. When discussing children, especially younger children, their agency is at times characterised as partial, or emerging, but with the presumption that with sufficient time they will eventually reach the same (presumed) status and ability as adult users (Livingstone & Third, 2017). At the other end of life, at the moment of death, the social media traces and online presences that persist after a user has passed away also present challenges in terms of agency. While there is an increasing push to include some sort of instructions about digital property in wills, these instructions are currently few and far between. Some platforms have deployed algorithmic solutions which have begun to address the reality of deceased users, but these are, at best, partial and largely insufficient responses. With these two figures in mind, I argue that the very young—from conception to birth and early infancy—and the recently deceased both act as liminal figures where the question of their (lack of) agency on social media highlights some of the ongoing challenges in presuming that social media traces can always be the responsibility of users with full, or even partial, agency. Rather, using a range of examples, I argue in this chapter that more encompassing ways of thinking about the relationship between social media, networked selves and identities, are needed. Drawing on work from the creative industries, I suggest that the term co-creation can be reframed to emphasise the way that social media almost always entails creating other people’s identities as much as our own. Parents and carers are the first arbiters and co-creators of a young person’s life, making a large number of important choices about what sort of private or public online presence a newly born baby will have, how that presence will develop over time, on which platforms, and under which circumstances. Parents, in effect, can choose to name their children into being online, and in doing so must navigate the parental joys of sharing whilst balancing this against the rights of the child to, amongst other things, privacy in the present and future. At the other end of life, but in functionally similar ways, the loved ones left behind by the recently deceased will often need to make decisions about which social media profiles and traces persist after that user has died, how these traces will be (re)framed, and what online spaces will persist (if any), possibly in the form of online memorials. Moreover, both ends of life are now situated in an online context where real identities and real names, which persist over time, are both expected and demanded by the policies and practices of online platforms. The use of real names on social media amplifies the impact and longevity of social media traces, whether early or late in life. In outlining the challenges inherent in framing the very young, and the recently deceased, online, I argue in this chapter that a broader sense of agency and impact is needed across all life-stages on social media. A wider lens in terms of the way users contribute to the stories of each other on social media may well assist us all in making decisions about online material that inevitably impact the lives and legacies of other people.
在社交媒体上共同创造生与死
虽然从定义上讲,社交媒体是关于将多人联系起来的,但许多关于社交媒体平台和实践的讨论都假设,账户和个人资料是由个人用户管理的,由代理机构对他们的活动做出完全知情的选择。在讨论儿童,特别是年幼的儿童时,他们的代理有时被描述为部分的或新兴的,但假设有足够的时间,他们最终将达到与成年用户相同的(假定的)状态和能力(Livingstone & Third, 2017)。在生命的另一端,在死亡的那一刻,用户去世后持续存在的社交媒体痕迹和在线存在也带来了代理方面的挑战。尽管越来越多的人希望在遗嘱中加入某种关于数字财产的说明,但这些说明目前很少。一些平台已经部署了算法解决方案,这些解决方案已经开始解决已故用户的现实问题,但这些充其量只是部分的,而且在很大程度上是不充分的。考虑到这两个人物,我认为非常年轻的人(从怀孕到出生和婴儿早期)和最近去世的人都是有限的人物,他们在社交媒体上(缺乏)代理的问题突出了一些正在进行的挑战,即假设社交媒体的追踪总是由具有完全或甚至部分代理的用户负责。相反,在本章中,我通过一系列的例子来论证,我们需要更全面地思考社交媒体、网络化自我和身份之间的关系。根据创意产业的工作,我建议可以重新定义“共同创造”一词,以强调社交媒体几乎总是需要创造他人的身份,就像创造我们自己的身份一样。父母和照顾者是年轻人生活的第一个仲裁者和共同创造者,他们做出了大量重要的选择,比如新生儿将拥有什么样的私人或公共网络形象,随着时间的推移,这种形象将如何发展,在什么平台上,在什么情况下。实际上,父母可以选择给自己的孩子起名上网,在这样做的过程中,他们必须在分享的乐趣中找到方向,同时平衡这与孩子现在和未来的隐私权之间的关系。在生命的另一端,但以类似的方式,最近去世的人留下的亲人往往需要决定哪些社交媒体档案和痕迹在用户死后会保留,这些痕迹将如何(重新)框架,以及哪些在线空间将会保留(如果有的话),可能以在线纪念的形式。此外,生活的两端现在都处于网络环境中,随着时间的推移,真实身份和真实姓名是在线平台的政策和实践所期望和要求的。在社交媒体上使用实名会放大社交媒体痕迹的影响和寿命,无论是早年还是晚年。在概述了在网络上塑造年幼者和刚去世的人的固有挑战时,我在本章中认为,在人生的各个阶段,都需要在社交媒体上建立一种更广泛的能动性和影响力。从用户在社交媒体上为彼此的故事做出贡献的方式来看,更广泛的视角可能会帮助我们所有人对不可避免地影响他人生活和遗产的在线材料做出决定。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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