Spotify是一种将健康、锻炼和健康实践融入金融化资本主义的技术

IF 6.5 1区 社会学 Q1 SOCIAL SCIENCES, INTERDISCIPLINARY
Chris Till
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引用次数: 0

摘要

Spotify主导着音频流媒体行业,提供几乎无限的音乐和其他“声音”库。他们最近对健康、运动和健康进行了各种干预,开发了精心策划和个性化的播放列表,重点关注跑步、举重和冥想等活动,并在算法生成的播放列表中穿插了有指导的锻炼。这篇文章表明,该公司正在开发新的方法来记录健康、锻炼和健康实践,比如监测活动、心率、情绪,以及更广泛的生活节奏和节奏。虽然这被认为有利于用户提供更个性化的体验,但对专利申请、财务报表和针对广告商和投资者的宣传材料的分析表明,还有其他目的。音频消费与新的数据化活动相结合,将用户“捆绑”成“受众商品”,然后出售给广告商。此外,这些创新,以及吸引广告商的潜力,构成了Spotify向潜在投资者讲述公司未来盈利能力的材料,或者至少是市场价值增长的材料,这对融入“金融化资本主义”的公司至关重要。这代表着日常生活的各个方面通过数据化进一步向商业开发开放,并有助于将与健康有关的做法重新定位为可打包用于投资组合的资产。本文分析的出版物展示了Spotify试图监控和塑造用户行为的一些方法,以使他们更容易接受金融化。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Spotify as a technology for integrating health, exercise and wellness practices into financialised capitalism
Spotify dominates the audio streaming industry and offers an almost limitless library of music and other ‘sounds’. They have recently made various interventions into health, exercise and wellness with the development of curated and personalised playlists focused on activities such as running, weightlifting and meditation and guided workouts interspersed with algorithmically generated playlists. This article suggests that the company are developing new means of datafying health, exercise and wellness practices such as monitoring activities, heart rate, mood and broadly the rhythms and tempos of their lives. While this is presented as beneficial to users to provide a more personalised experience, analysis of patent applications, financial statements and promotional materials targeting advertisers and investors suggest other objectives. Audio consumption is combined with the newly datafied activities to ‘bundle’ users into ‘audience commodities’ to be sold to advertisers. Furthermore, such innovations, and the potential to attract advertisers, form the materials through which Spotify construct stories to potential investors about the future profitability, or at least growth in market value, of the company essential for firms integrated into ‘financialised capitalism’. This represents a further opening up of aspects of everyday lives to commercial exploitation through datafication and contributes to an attempt to reposition health-related practices as assets which can be packaged for investment portfolios. The publications analysed in this article demonstrate some of the ways in which Spotify seek to both monitor and shape practices of users to make them more amenable to financialisation.
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来源期刊
Big Data & Society
Big Data & Society SOCIAL SCIENCES, INTERDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
10.90
自引率
10.60%
发文量
59
审稿时长
11 weeks
期刊介绍: Big Data & Society (BD&S) is an open access, peer-reviewed scholarly journal that publishes interdisciplinary work principally in the social sciences, humanities, and computing and their intersections with the arts and natural sciences. The journal focuses on the implications of Big Data for societies and aims to connect debates about Big Data practices and their effects on various sectors such as academia, social life, industry, business, and government. BD&S considers Big Data as an emerging field of practices, not solely defined by but generative of unique data qualities such as high volume, granularity, data linking, and mining. The journal pays attention to digital content generated both online and offline, encompassing social media, search engines, closed networks (e.g., commercial or government transactions), and open networks like digital archives, open government, and crowdsourced data. Rather than providing a fixed definition of Big Data, BD&S encourages interdisciplinary inquiries, debates, and studies on various topics and themes related to Big Data practices. BD&S seeks contributions that analyze Big Data practices, involve empirical engagements and experiments with innovative methods, and reflect on the consequences of these practices for the representation, realization, and governance of societies. As a digital-only journal, BD&S's platform can accommodate multimedia formats such as complex images, dynamic visualizations, videos, and audio content. The contents of the journal encompass peer-reviewed research articles, colloquia, bookcasts, think pieces, state-of-the-art methods, and work by early career researchers.
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