The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Facebook: Updating

Scholars and news media generally name Facebook’s two central problems: that its data collection practices are a threat to user privacy, and that stricter regulations are required to prevent “bad actor” from spreading hate and disinformation. However separating these two concerns—personal data colle...

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Main Author: Elisha Lim
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2020-04-01
Series:Social Media + Society
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2056305120910144
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spelling doaj-132b1d17be4b49098773bfab411639252020-11-25T03:46:39ZengSAGE PublishingSocial Media + Society2056-30512020-04-01610.1177/2056305120910144The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Facebook: Updating Elisha LimScholars and news media generally name Facebook’s two central problems: that its data collection practices are a threat to user privacy, and that stricter regulations are required to prevent “bad actor” from spreading hate and disinformation. However separating these two concerns—personal data collection and bad actors—overlooks the way that one generates the other. First, this article builds on critical race scholarship to examine how identity politics are historically distorted and commodified into profitable vigilance and intolerance, in what I call a transition from identity politics, to personal identity economics . Facebook’s Ad Manager, for example, reveals how personal identities are itemized as advertising assets, which are cultivated through deeper, more trenchant identity politics. Second, this article theorizes about what makes such staunch, intolerant identity politics addictive. Drawing on Max Weber’s theories of the Protestant Ethic, this article explores how Facebook activism thrives on deep-rooted Christian paradigms of dogma, virtue, redemption, and piety. As dogmatic personal identity economics spread across the globe, they testify to how Facebook’s business model manufactures bad actors.https://doi.org/10.1177/2056305120910144
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Elisha Lim
spellingShingle Elisha Lim
The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Facebook: Updating
Social Media + Society
author_facet Elisha Lim
author_sort Elisha Lim
title The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Facebook: Updating
title_short The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Facebook: Updating
title_full The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Facebook: Updating
title_fullStr The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Facebook: Updating
title_full_unstemmed The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Facebook: Updating
title_sort protestant ethic and the spirit of facebook: updating
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Social Media + Society
issn 2056-3051
publishDate 2020-04-01
description Scholars and news media generally name Facebook’s two central problems: that its data collection practices are a threat to user privacy, and that stricter regulations are required to prevent “bad actor” from spreading hate and disinformation. However separating these two concerns—personal data collection and bad actors—overlooks the way that one generates the other. First, this article builds on critical race scholarship to examine how identity politics are historically distorted and commodified into profitable vigilance and intolerance, in what I call a transition from identity politics, to personal identity economics . Facebook’s Ad Manager, for example, reveals how personal identities are itemized as advertising assets, which are cultivated through deeper, more trenchant identity politics. Second, this article theorizes about what makes such staunch, intolerant identity politics addictive. Drawing on Max Weber’s theories of the Protestant Ethic, this article explores how Facebook activism thrives on deep-rooted Christian paradigms of dogma, virtue, redemption, and piety. As dogmatic personal identity economics spread across the globe, they testify to how Facebook’s business model manufactures bad actors.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2056305120910144
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