论虚拟影响者的本体论与伦理

B. Robinson
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引用次数: 46

摘要

2018年,《时代》杂志将Miquela Souza评为互联网上25位最具影响力的人物之一,尽管事实上她根本不是一个人。Miquela是第一个数字创建的虚拟网红。本文初步分析了与Instagram等社交媒体平台上虚拟网红兴起相关的一些本体论和伦理问题。通过对Miquela的关注,作者认为,虽然这些虚构的身份起初可能会引起不安,但在道德上没有什么重要的区别,将他们与自然的、“现实生活”的影响者区分开来。但是,远远不是“一切如常”,无法区分“虚拟”和“现实生活”的影响者提出了关于身份道德建设的重要问题,以及这可能如何影响在线空间信任等社会价值的持续维护。本文借鉴了个人同一性和代理理论方面的文献,建立了Miquela和其他“现实生活”影响者之间没有意义差异的本体论主张,这导致了关于道德问题的讨论,包括道德责任和动机,以及透明度。截至2020年5月,这似乎是第一篇关于虚拟影响者的同行评议文章。在如何概念化这些身份方面,以及在如何维护网络空间信任等社会价值方面,都有进一步研究的重要机会。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Towards an Ontology and Ethics of Virtual Influencers
In 2018, TIME magazine named Miquela Souza one of the 25 most influential people on the internet, despite the fact she is not a person at all. Miquela is the first digitally created virtual influencer. This paper provides an initial analysis of some of the ontological and ethical issues associated with the rise of virtual influencers on social media platforms like Instagram. Through a focus on Miquela, it is argued that while these fabricated identities may cause uneasiness at first, there is nothing morally significant that distinguishes them from natural, ‘real life’ influencers. But, far from ‘business as usual’, the inability to separate ‘virtual’ and ‘real life’ influencers raises important questions about the ethical construction of identity, and how this may affect the ongoing preservation of social values like trust in online spaces. The paper draws on literature in personal identity and agency theory to establish the ontological claim that there is no meaningful difference between Miquela and other ‘real life’ influencers, which leads to the discussion about ethical issues including moral responsibility and motivation, and transparency. As of May 2020, this appears to be the first peer-reviewed article theorising about virtual influencers. There are significant opportunities for further research, both in terms of how we should conceptualise these identities, as well as more empirically based social research into how to preserve social values like trust in online spaces.
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