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Media type:
E-Article
Title:
The politics of ‘platforms’
Contributor:
Gillespie, Tarleton
imprint:
SAGE Publications, 2010
Published in:New Media & Society
Language:
English
DOI:
10.1177/1461444809342738
ISSN:
1461-4448;
1461-7315
Origination:
Footnote:
Description:
<jats:p> Online content providers such as YouTube are carefully positioning themselves to users, clients, advertisers and policymakers, making strategic claims for what they do and do not do, and how their place in the information landscape should be understood. One term in particular, ‘platform’, reveals the contours of this discursive work. The term has been deployed in both their populist appeals and their marketing pitches, sometimes as technical ‘platforms’, sometimes as ‘platforms’ from which to speak, sometimes as ‘platforms’ of opportunity. Whatever tensions exist in serving all of these constituencies are carefully elided. The term also fits their efforts to shape information policy, where they seek protection for facilitating user expression, yet also seek limited liability for what those users say. As these providers become the curators of public discourse, we must examine the roles they aim to play, and the terms by which they hope to be judged. </jats:p>