I Sell My Facebook Profile on Meta-Markets
I work for Facebook everyday but I am not getting paid. In their recent Social Ads announcement Facebook says âIt is an ad-supported service. It is a free service.â Pause. Did we sign a contract? How do you measure my labor and serve accordingly? I donât know how you measure the value of my informational content, the value of my informational content uploaded by my friends to your server, the value of my relationships, the value of my activities, my life.This is the story of immaterial labor. Immaterial labor, just like the spectacle (the social relations among people) is digitally measurable since the social web services ramped up (See Trebor Scholzâs A History of the Social Web). Today with the new Facebook Social Ads, the measure of the value of my labor is even more precise for Facebook, but more ambiguous for me.Maurizio Lazzarato defines the immaterial labor as the labor that produces the informational and cultural content of the commodity. For Lazzarato the concept of immaterial labor combines two different aspects of labor:
âOn the one hand, as regards to the âinformational contentâ of the commodity, it refers directly to the changes taking place in workerâs labor process⌠where the skills involved in direct labor are increasingly skills involving cybernetics and computer control. On the other hand, as regards the activity that produces âcultural contentâ of the commodity, immaterial labor involves a series of activities that are not normally recognized as âworkââin other words, the kinds of activities involved in defining and fixing cultural and artistic standards, fashions, tastes, consumer norms, and, more strategically, public opinion.â
I think Lazzarato would cry if he knew that these activities are distributed in the âFacebook Mini-Feedâ everyday.Tim OâReilly addresses similar issues in his writings on open data. But what is the data that must be open anyways? Is it only the informational content we create everyday. What about our relationships and our activities? Who owns them? Data ownership here, directly ties to the capital.I think Facebook or any other social web service provider will never tell us how much they make out of our labor on their services. We never know how much we give and how much we get. Nicholas Carr points to the same issue in his recent post:
âFirst you get your users to entrust their personal data to you, and then you not only sell that data to advertisers but you get the users to be the vector for the ads. And what do the users get in return? An animated Sprite Sips character to interact with.â
To resolve this problem of unbalanced value system, we started a stock market for our socially networked creative products. This is called Meta-Markets. In NYSE or NASDAQ people trade shares of companies. In Meta-Markets people trade shares of profiles. Just like companies, socially networked products have ever growing values. When product owners issue their shares in Meta-Markets, they raise capitalâtoday play capital, but tomorrow real capital. With this project we aim to help people to retain the value of their immaterial labor in social web services.
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