Abstract

ABSTRACTIt is the purpose of this paper to make explicit the methodology (the theory of the methods) by which we conducted research for an Economic and Social Research Council-funded research project on the relationship of values to value. Specifically, we wanted to study the imperative of Facebook to monetize social relationships, what happens when one of our significant forms of communication is driven by the search for profit, by the logic of capital. We therefore wanted to ‘get inside’ and understand what capital's new lines of flight, informationally driven models of economic expansion, do to social relations. Taking up the challenge to develop methods appropriate to the challenges of ‘big data', we applied four different methods to investigate the interface that is Facebook: we designed custom software tools, generated an online survey, developed data visualizations, and conducted interviews with participants to discuss their understandings of our analysis. We used Lefebvre's [(2004). Rhythmnanalysis: Space, time and everyday life. London: Continuum] rhythmanalysis and Kember and Zylinska's [(2012). Life after new media: Mediation as a vital process. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press] ideas about ‘lifeness’ to inform our methodology. This paper reports on a research process that was not entirely straightforward. We were thwarted in a variety of ways, especially by challenge to use software to study software and had to develop our project in unanticipated directions, but we also found much more than we initially imagined possible. As so few academic researchers are able to study Facebook through its own tools (as Tufekci [(2014). Big questions for social media big data: Representativeness, validity and other methodological pitfalls. In ICWSM ‘14: Proceedings of the 8th International AAAI Conference on Weblogs and Social Media (pp. 505–514)] notes how, unsurprisingly, at the 2013 ICWSM only about 5% of papers were about Facebook and nearly all of these were co-authored with Facebook data scientists), we hope that our methodology is useful for other researchers seeking to develop less conventional research on Facebook.

Highlights

  • The Facebook project is part of a more general investigation of the relationship between values and value, funded by the Economic and SocialB

  • In ICWSM ‘14: Proceedings of the 8th International AAAI Conference on Weblogs and Social Media] notes how, unsurprisingly, at the 2013 ICWSM only about 5% of papers were about Facebook and most of these were co-authored with Facebook data scientists), we hope that our methodology is useful for other researchers seeking to develop less conventional research on Facebook

  • We have established the terms for our inquiry into Facebook

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Summary

Introduction

The Facebook project is part of a more general investigation of the relationship between values and value (see https://values.doc.gold.ac.uk/), funded by the Economic and Social. As Mair, Greiffenhagen, and Sharrock (2015) point out, it is common practice to omit any discussion of difficulties encountered in the development of technical components in a research project; yet, these ‘worldly troubles’ and the ways in which a given team responds to them can often be significant factors in shaping how a given piece of research puts social relations on display, or even whether a given phenomenon can be studied Many platforms, such as Facebook and Twitter, provide access to their data through an API that is often available for free through registration. Facebook is a platform which mediates multiple features: to convert data into capital, to interest investors, to promote advertising to advertisers, to induce free development labour, to keep people connected, to encourage people to divulge, to experiment with users, to make users available to different forms of media. Facebook operates to transmit many other media such a film, news and gossip; it mediates media

Conclusion
Findings
See ‘Monetary and moral value

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