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The dark side of digitalization and social media platform governance: a citizen engagement study

Stephen McCarthy (Department of Business Information Systems, Cork University Business School, University College Cork, Cork, Ireland)
Wendy Rowan (Department of Business Information Systems, Cork University Business School, University College Cork, Cork, Ireland)
Carolanne Mahony (Department of Business Information Systems, Cork University Business School, University College Cork, Cork, Ireland)
Antoine Vergne (Missions Publiques, Berlin, Germany)

Internet Research

ISSN: 1066-2243

Article publication date: 9 January 2023

Issue publication date: 27 November 2023

1147

Abstract

Purpose

Social media platforms are a pervasive technology that continues to define the modern world. While social media has brought many benefits to society in terms of connection and content sharing, numerous concerns remain for the governance of social media platforms going forward, including (but not limited to) the spread of misinformation, hate speech and online surveillance. However, the voice of citizens and other non-experts is often missing from such conversations in information systems literature, which has led to an alleged gap between research and the everyday life of citizens.

Design/methodology/approach

The authors address this gap by presenting findings from 16 h of online dialog with 25 citizens on social media platform governance. The online dialog was undertaken as part of a worldwide consultation project called “We, the internet”, which sought to provide citizens with a voice on a range of topics such as “Digitalization and Me,” “My Data, Your Data, Our Data” and “A Strong Digital Public Sphere.” Five phases of thematic analysis were undertaken by the authors to code the corpus of qualitative data.

Findings

Drawing on the Theory of Communicative Action, the authors discuss three dialogical processes critical to citizen discourse: lifeworld reasoning, rationalization and moral action. The findings point toward citizens’ perspectives of current and future issues associated with social media platform governance, including concerns around the multiplicity of digital identities, consent for vulnerable groups and transparency in content moderation. The findings also reveal citizens’ rationalization of the dilemmas faced in addressing these issues going forward, including tensions such as digital accountability vs data privacy, protection vs inclusion and algorithmic censorship vs free speech.

Originality/value

Based on outcomes from this dialogical process, moral actions in the form of policy recommendations are proposed by citizens and for citizens. The authors find that tackling these dark sides of digitalization is something too important to be left to “Big Tech” and equally requires an understanding of citizens’ perspectives to ensure an informed and positive imprint for change.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The authors would like to acknowledge the helpful comments provided by the senior editor, associate editor and four anonymous reviewers. An earlier version of this paper was published at the Hawaii International Conference on Systems Sciences (McCarthy et al., 2021). The authors are grateful for the feedback received from the chair, reviewers and attendees at the session.

Citation

McCarthy, S., Rowan, W., Mahony, C. and Vergne, A. (2023), "The dark side of digitalization and social media platform governance: a citizen engagement study", Internet Research, Vol. 33 No. 6, pp. 2172-2204. https://doi.org/10.1108/INTR-03-2022-0142

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2022, Emerald Publishing Limited

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