The like economy: Social buttons and the data-intensive web

Carolin Gerlitz, Anne Helmond

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

The paper examines Facebook’s ambition to extend into the entire web by focusing on social buttons and developing a medium-specific platform critique. It contextualises the rise of buttons and counters as metrics for user engagement and links them to different web economies. Facebook’s Like buttons enable multiple data flows between various actors, contributing to a simultaneous de- and re-centralisation of the web. They allow the instant transformation of user engagement into numbers on button counters, which can be traded and multiplied but also function as tracking devices. The increasing presence of buttons and associated social plugins on the web creates new forms of connectivity between websites, introducing an alternative fabric of the web. Contrary to Facebook’s claim to promote a more social experience of the web, this paper explores the implementation and technical infrastructure of such buttons to conceptualise them as part of a so-called ‘Like economy’
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1348-1365
Number of pages17
JournalNew Media and Society
Volume15
Issue number8
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 4 Feb 2013

Keywords

  • Digital methods
  • fabric of the web
  • Facebook
  • Like economy
  • medium-specificity
  • platform studies
  • social buttons
  • social web
  • software studies
  • web analytics

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