#bigdatatelemetrics
Carly Shearman – Week 10
I was told by a little bird that for my final blog post I should talk about Twitter. We, members of the Twittersphere, produce a great mass of data. In fact, we produce so much data that it is called ‘big data’. We are drowning our advertising companies, researchers and other big brother-ish characters in so much data that it is too much data. ‘Big data’ is kind of like content analysis; it produces a great mass of data. We are left wondering though, what does it all mean?
#hashtag research helps us to make sense of what is going on. Woodford (2014) explains that the small hashtag symbol allows us to:
Coordinate conversation around a particular subject (e.g. #bringbackourgirls)
Relatively easily capture and analyse (just click on the hashtag and you become part of a new world specifically designed around one topic)
A major issue with hashtagging is that they only work when you use them (Woodford 2014). Therefore, if I am discussing My Kitchen Rules, people can only be part of a conversation or analyse me IF I use the hashtag. By using a hashtag, we are kind of placing a tracking device on whatever we post.
If we essentially put tracking devices on our content then don’t we want to watch what people could track? My question to you is how much information do you put up on the public domain? A little? A lot? You would be surprised to know that almost everything you do is traceable. That includes online purchases you make and private messages on Facebook (Gray 2014). How crazy is that?
This week’s lectures and readings were helpful but an article I read really made me understand the world of new media, big data and telemetrics. The article was about Janet Vertesi, a pregnant woman determined to “keep her pregnancy undetected by cookies, bots and data collectors,” (Gray 2014). Sounds like a simple task, right? Wrong! A normal person’s data is worth around 10 cents HOWEVER a pregnant woman’s data is worth around $1.50 (Gray 2014). Why? Because they are an advertisers dream! Baby clothes, baby furniture, prams, bottles, diapers, maternity wear; the baby business thrives on soon-to-be-mums wanting the best for their newborn.
Twittersphere is not all about being tracked and how kind of stalkerish that is but it is about connectivity. According to Harrington (2013, 239) “television is a highly social medium,” and “can be enhanced when experienced alongside others.” Twitter and hashtagging creates a sense of community amongst fans. Social media eradicates barriers of time and space. The art of hashtagging allows people to connect with those outside their ‘friends’ or ‘followers’ and allows them to discuss their opinions about a particular TV program or storyline (Harrington 2013, 240).
Social media is a “second screen” whilst watching television with many people now using social media while watching television (Ericsson 2012). Social media, and more so Twitter, allows us to connect with people outside our living room. Twitter also ensures that marketing companies have the highest chance of success by targeting and profiling people due to what we discuss, share and post.
For my final blog post, I again present you with the confusing facts. Is Twitter good or bad? Are we okay with being tracked if it means we get to have a social forum? Social media and media communications is not so black and white. These weekly reflections have really taught me that. But hey, I guess at the end of the day it is up to us as individuals to decide what we do and do not find acceptable and whether we do or do not want to participate in these new medias.
#thanksforreading
Reference List
Ericsson. 2012. “TV and Video: An analysis of evolving consumer habits. August 2012” Accessed May 8, 2014. http://www.ericsson.com/res/docs/2012/consumerlab/tv_video_consumerlab_report.pdf
Gray, Sarah. 2014. “One woman’s attempt to hide her pregnancy from big data – it’s more difficult than you’d expect.” Salon, April 29. Accessed May 8, 2014. http://www.salon.com/2014/04/28/one_womans_attempt_to_hide_her_pregnancy_from_big_data
Harrington, Stephen. 2013. “Chapter 18: Tweeting About the Telly: Live TV, Audiences and Social Media.” In Twitter and Society, edited by Axel Bruns, Jean Burgess, Merja Mahrt and Katrin Weller, 237-248. New York: Peter Lang.
Woodford, Darryl. 2014. “KCB206 Internet, Self and Beyond: Week 9 lecture notes.” Accessed May 8, 2014. http://www.dpwoodford.net/wp-content/uploads/2014/02/KCB206-Big-Data-Lecture_Small.pdf















