Filtered in/filtered out: Locative media and social accessibility in urban spaces

Social accessibility involves the capacity of a person to be reached by other people, typically through established social networks. Locative media provide new complications to the issue of social accessibility in urban spaces. They do not connect people with their existing social networks, but rath...

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Main Author: Darryl A. Pieber
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Seismo Verlag 2021-06-01
Series:Studies in Communication Sciences
Subjects:
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spelling doaj-65206eb4da64460e90092cc8ef94922f2021-07-15T12:54:57ZdeuSeismo VerlagStudies in Communication Sciences1424-48962296-41502021-06-01211115127https://doi.org/10.24434/j.scoms.2021.01.008Filtered in/filtered out: Locative media and social accessibility in urban spacesDarryl A. Pieber0https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9533-9888The University of Western Ontario, Faculty of Information & Media StudiesSocial accessibility involves the capacity of a person to be reached by other people, typically through established social networks. Locative media provide new complications to the issue of social accessibility in urban spaces. They do not connect people with their existing social networks, but rather with people – often strangers – immediately around them. Locative media apps provide users with the ability to manage these anonymous connections through filtering functionalities. This filtering out and filtering in functionality has profound implications for the social relations of strangers in urban spaces. At the heart of the matter is the question of who is made visible and who is made invisible. Many studies of locative media use demonstrate troubling directions in the ways in which they are developed and used. Often, locative media apps reinforce and reify existing racisms and other forms of prejudice, and a general tendency to try to simplify or eliminate differences.locative mediasocial accessibilitymobile communicationalgorithmsfilteringcitiesurbaninformation and communication technologies
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Darryl A. Pieber
spellingShingle Darryl A. Pieber
Filtered in/filtered out: Locative media and social accessibility in urban spaces
Studies in Communication Sciences
locative media
social accessibility
mobile communication
algorithms
filtering
cities
urban
information and communication technologies
author_facet Darryl A. Pieber
author_sort Darryl A. Pieber
title Filtered in/filtered out: Locative media and social accessibility in urban spaces
title_short Filtered in/filtered out: Locative media and social accessibility in urban spaces
title_full Filtered in/filtered out: Locative media and social accessibility in urban spaces
title_fullStr Filtered in/filtered out: Locative media and social accessibility in urban spaces
title_full_unstemmed Filtered in/filtered out: Locative media and social accessibility in urban spaces
title_sort filtered in/filtered out: locative media and social accessibility in urban spaces
publisher Seismo Verlag
series Studies in Communication Sciences
issn 1424-4896
2296-4150
publishDate 2021-06-01
description Social accessibility involves the capacity of a person to be reached by other people, typically through established social networks. Locative media provide new complications to the issue of social accessibility in urban spaces. They do not connect people with their existing social networks, but rather with people – often strangers – immediately around them. Locative media apps provide users with the ability to manage these anonymous connections through filtering functionalities. This filtering out and filtering in functionality has profound implications for the social relations of strangers in urban spaces. At the heart of the matter is the question of who is made visible and who is made invisible. Many studies of locative media use demonstrate troubling directions in the ways in which they are developed and used. Often, locative media apps reinforce and reify existing racisms and other forms of prejudice, and a general tendency to try to simplify or eliminate differences.
topic locative media
social accessibility
mobile communication
algorithms
filtering
cities
urban
information and communication technologies
work_keys_str_mv AT darrylapieber filteredinfilteredoutlocativemediaandsocialaccessibilityinurbanspaces
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