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Easy data, hard data: The politics and pragmatics of Twitter research after the computational turn

Authors :
Elmer, G
Redden, J
Langlois, G
Burgess, Jean
Bruns, Axel
Elmer, G
Redden, J
Langlois, G
Burgess, Jean
Bruns, Axel
Source :
Compromised data: From social media to big data
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

In this chapter, we draw out the relevant themes from a range of critical scholarship from the small body of digital media and software studies work that has focused on the politics of Twitter data and the sociotechnical means by which access is regulated. We highlight in particular the contested relationships between social media research (in both academic and non-academic contexts) and the data wholesale, retail, and analytics industries that feed on them. In the second major section of the chapter we discuss in detail the pragmatic edge of these politics in terms of what kinds of scientific research is and is not possible in the current political economy of Twitter data access. Finally, at the end of the chapter we return to the much broader implications of these issues for the politics of knowledge, demonstrating how the apparently microscopic level of how the Twitter API mediates access to Twitter data actually inscribes and influences the macro level of the global political economy of science itself, through re-inscribing institutional and traditional disciplinary privilege We conclude with some speculations about future developments in data rights and data philanthropy that may at least mitigate some of these negative impacts.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Compromised data: From social media to big data
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.ocn898788297
Document Type :
Electronic Resource