MyDigitalFootprint.ORG: Young People and the Proprietary Ecology of Everyday Data

Item

Title
MyDigitalFootprint.ORG: Young People and the Proprietary Ecology of Everyday Data
Identifier
d_2009_2013:df9e9941a03d:11839
Creator
Donovan, Gregory T.,
Contributor
Cindi Katz
Date
2013
Language
English
Publisher
City University of New York.
Subject
Social psychology | Information science | Web studies
Abstract
Young people are the canaries in our contemporary data mine. They are at the forefront of complex negotiations over privacy, property, and security in environments saturated with information systems. The productive and entertaining promises of proprietary media have led to widespread adoption among youth whose daily activities now generate troves of data that are mined for governance and profit. As they text, email, network, and search within these proprietary ecologies, young people's identity configurations link up with modes of capitalist production. The MyDigitalFootprint.ORG Project was thus initiated to unpack and engage young people's material social relations with/in proprietary ecologies through participatory action design research. The project began by interviewing New Yorkers ages 14-19. Five of these interviewees then participated as co-researchers in a Youth Design and Research Collective (YDRC) to analyze interview findings through the collaborative design of an open source social network. In taking a medium as our method, co-researchers took on the role of social network producers and gained new perspectives otherwise mystified to consumers. Considering my work with the YDRC I argue that involving youth in designing information ecologies fosters critical capacities for participating in acts of research and knowledge production. More critical participation in these ecologies, even proprietary ones, is necessary for opening opaque aspects of our environment and orienting data circulation toward more equitable and just ends.
Type
dissertation
Source
2009_2013.csv
degree
Ph.D.