THE HEDGEHOG REVIEW: VOL. 20 NO. 1 (SPRING 2018)
Tending the Digital Commons: A Small Ethics toward the Future
Alan Jacobs
Facebook is unlikely to shut down tomorrow; nor is Twitter, or
Instagram, or any other major social network. But they could. And it
would be a good exercise to reflect on the fact that, should any or
all of them disappear, no user would have any legal or practical
recourse. I started thinking about this situation a few years ago
when Tumblr—a platform devoted to a highly streamlined form of
blogging, with an emphasis on easy reposting from other accounts—was
bought by Yahoo. I was a heavy user of Tumblr at the time, having
made thousands of posts, and given the propensity of large tech
companies to buy smaller ones and then shut them down, I wondered
what would become of my posts if Yahoo decided that Tumblr wasn’t
worth the cost of maintaining it. I found that I was troubled by the
possibility to a degree I hadn’t anticipated. It would be hyperbolic
(not to say comical) to describe my Tumblr as a work of art, but I
had put a lot of thought into what went on it, and sometimes I
enjoyed looking through the sequence of posts, noticing how I had
woven certain themes into that sequence, or feeling pleasure at
having found interesting and unusual images. I felt a surge of
proprietary affection—and anxiety.
[...]
continua qui:
https://iasc-culture.org/THR/THR_article_2018_Spring_Jacobs.php