The semantics of Silicon Valley Capitalism are precise, measured, and designed to undermine preexisting definitions of the things such capitalists seek to exploit. It is no coincidence that digital connections are often called “friends,” even though the terms “friend” and “Facebook friend” have very different meanings. And then there is “social,” a Silicon Valley shorthand term for “sharing digital information” that bears little resemblance to the word “social” as we’ve traditionally used it. From “Living Social” to “making music social,” “social media” companies use friendly old words to spin new modes of interaction into concepts more comfortable and familiar. It is easier to swallow massive changes to interpersonal norms, expectations, and behaviors when such shifts are repackaged and presented as the delightful idea of being “social” with “friends.”
But is this “social” so social? Yes and no and not quite. To elaborate, we propose a distinction: “Social” versus “social,” in which the capital-S “Social” refers not to the conventional notion of social but specifically to Silicon-Valley-Social. The point is, simply, that when Silicon Valley entrepreneurs say “social,” they mean only a specific slice of human sociality.
To be clear, we are not arguing that social only takes place offline while Social happens online—because we are not digital dualists. What we are arguing is that we need to make a conceptual and semantic distinction between the broader meaning of “social” (as it applies to both on- and offline) and what Silicon Valley entrepreneurs mean when they say “Social” (which happens primarily, though not exclusively, through social media).
social
First, what do we mean by the traditional meaning of “social”? The landscape of social is vast and broad, far beyond the scope of this post—but this is precisely our point. Somewhat ironically, “small-s social” is huge. In adjective form, “social” means simply
- of or relating to society and its organization;
- of or relating to rank and status in society;
- needing companionship and therefore best suited to living in communities; or
- relating to or designed for activities in which people meet each other for pleasure.
Boiled down, “social” pertains to pretty much anything that transpires between two or more people (directly or indirectly; on- or offline). Given that we are indeed social creatures, and that much of what we conceptualize as personal and individual is actually shaped and influenced by the societies in which we live (for example, our taste preferences, emotions, etc), “social” pertains to nearly every component of our day-to-day lives.
Yet startup scenesters, digital media moguls, and Internet Cool Kids (to name just a few) use the word “social” to reference a much more specific portion of human sociality. That small piece is hardly interchangeable with the whole of human interaction, however, and such mislabeling threatens to obscure the wider range of interactions that fall outside that subset’s narrow scope.
Social
“Social” (capital-S) is what Silicon Valley Capitalists usually mean when they use the term “social”: interactions that are measurable, trackable, quantifiable, and above all exploitable. Whereas much (but not all) of social is nebulous and difficult to force into databases, Social can be captured and more effortlessly put to work. Thus, behavior Social to the degree that it is easily databaseable.
Social (capital-S) is the fuel of Web 2.0, the so-called “participatory web” (as if ‘the web’ hasn’t always been participatory); it is a critical source of free labor, on which most social media business models depend. When so-called ‘friends’ converse or share content through social media platforms, they support a system that incentivizes other users to log in and participate as well. Each reciprocated and initiated piece of interaction prompts a user’s ‘friends’ to log in and respond, and thereby funnels free labor into an ever-expanding and potentially self-perpetuating supply of value-adding, business-sustaining new content. Critically, these Social interactions also generate the digital traces that make up social media’s Big Data, which many argue is the real product that social media companies produce.
To illustrate the relationship between social and Social, first think of a watershed: water falls from the sky, runs down the side of a mountain, makes its way to a river, and eventually drains to the ocean, where more water is evaporating and returning to the clouds. Consider the whole of this water system akin to social. Now zoom in on the river alone, and imagine that river diverted & dammed to build a hydroelectric plant: this is akin to Social. Social (capital-S) aims to reshape sociality in ways that direct as much interaction as possible through the specific channels of digital media, in order to harness that interaction for commercial purposes. (Of course, the degree to which this results in actual profit varies widely.)
Equating Social with social is like equating that hydroelectric dam with the whole of the watershed in which it is situated. Consider, for example, Alexis Madrigal’s (@alexismadrigal) recent piece on so-called “dark social,” the “vast trove of social traffic [that] is essentially invisible to most analytics programs.” Especially given the pejorative connotations of “dark,” labeling untrackable digital interactions as “dark social” only makes sense through a Social framework. When we consider the realm of social, it’s unremarkable that people might interact with each other away from the prying eyes of cookies and modified links; after all, most social interaction escapes direct digital observation and databaseification. “Dark social” is menacing to the Social, because “dark social” threatens to let interaction escape through channels that do not turn social media turbines.
Silicon Valley Capitalists would love to remold sociality around the logic of Social, in order to reroute as much social interaction as possible through trackable digital channels. To an extent, they’re already succeeding. Digital dualists may claim that only offline things are “real,” but young people seeking housemates from pools of strangers (for instance) have started to demand Facebook profiles as proof that applicants are “real.” For these master tenants, mere email correspondence no longer suffices; only the tracked, quantifiable, observable artifacts of candidate housemates’ lives are acceptable proof of personhood.
It is a mistake, however, to think either that you can separate Social from social or that Social is interchangeable with social. Without social there simply is no Social. Said differently, all Social is social, but not all social is Social. [Easy!]
In future posts we hope to outline more specific critiques of Social, but first we need this social versus Social vocabulary. We need to stop conflating social and Social. Silicon Valley Capitalists have incentive to pretend that they are dealing in social (and indeed they are), but let’s remember that they are promoting a very specific kind of sociality. When Facebook says “social,” what they usually mean is “Social”: that which can be easily quantified, that which can be made to fit within the rows and columns of a spreadsheet, that which success and failure can be measured against, and that which can be sold for cold hard cash.
Whitney Erin Boesel and Nathan Jurgenson are simultaneously social and Social on Twitter. You can track them by following @phenatypical and @nathanjurgenson.
Hoover Dam postcard image from http://www.nancyscollectibles.com/hooverdamnight.jpg
Bridge construction at Hoover Dam photo from http://www.wejetset.com/magazine/2009/11/10/856/the_hoover_dam_bypass
Comments 33
SAA — November 1, 2012
Do we know who coined the term "Social Media" in the first place?
Obviously, being social and "sociability" is different from the business of Social Media, and I agree that the term is misnamed. What I'm not sure about is defining things with big "S" vs little "s" to make the point. For example, in our papers, and on other comments on this blog Mike and I have used the term "sociability," when referring to the social aspect of people interacting.
One thing to consider is that for Silicon Valley Capitalists, "Social" might be "social. In their world, big S Social (yes aware it sounds like big a*s) is what being "social" is all about. Many people "use" others and call it being "social." Are you including psychopaths and sociopaths (or Sociopaths) here?
You write:
"Yet startup scenesters, digital media moguls, and Internet Cool Kids (to name just a few) use the word “social” to reference a much more specific portion of human sociality."
Those are the very people trying to make money from Social Media by commercializing sociability.
Most of the people designing and building Social Media, started in those groups.
I would go further to argue that they are duplicitous--talking about sociability while creating and measuring within Social Media.
Franz — November 1, 2012
Very useful piece!. Thank you for contributing to an excellent distinction between social vs Social in our vocabulary. We are currently trying to make some distinction in the agricultural research and innovation domain (http://www.ciard.net/pathways30). Indeed - a very specific kind of Sociality is increasing through digital channel, but many different rich forms of non-digital social interaction occur within ("small S") social networks and communities.
I look forward to reading your future posts.
Scott F — November 1, 2012
Great essay. But I think you misrepresented Alexis Madrigal. Despite his use of the term “dark social”, I see no evidence that he considers this kind of sharing threatening, as you imply. If anything, he's urging people to focus less on the social media turbines in view of all the sharing that bypasses them. He explains his term “dark social” by analogy to dark energy — a cosmological term, where “dark” may have connotations of “unknown”, but not of “dangerous, menacing, bad”.
In fact, the “dark social” piece seems not to be in opposition to this essay at all, but rather gives credence to your point that “social” is much larger than Silicon Valley's “Social”.
Boaz — November 2, 2012
I especially like the water/watershed/dam metaphor here. As rain and water have an immense range of nourishing purposes within a watershed, so do our social interactions with each other in a community. A dam can be useful, in that it provides concentration of power that may be hard to get otherwise, and that can be used to do some good (or bad) stuff. It also reminds us that dams can be built in ways that don’t ruin the watershed, though they may well do so. One can put fish ladders into it to not prevent fish from spawning, and probably there are appropriate size dams for given rivers. And ideally, dams wouldn't be built at all in regions where they are not wanted by the people living there. The metaphor also brings attention to the question of who benefits from the dam (or quantified data on Social interaction as the case may be). So it seems to be a useful metaphor on both sides- reminding us of the much larger range of purposes with which we interact and take care of each other, and also on how our interactions can be quantified and then used to power a larger system that may or may not benefit us.
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Kaori London — December 13, 2012
This was interesting. The difference between "social" and "Social" was interesting to hear. Having not used facebook in a period of time, the idea of a capital letter being the terms difference in usage but still seems a little odd to have two words that are associated with social networking, and other social behavior is a little confusing.... but i get the point.
Now the watershed paragraph was what made me continue reading this. It was a very creative way to give an example, and was very cleanly written to give a clear idea of what is being describe and defined.
snc167@jwu.edu — December 13, 2012
The figure of speech brings attention to the question of who quantified data on Social interaction as the case may be. Therefore it gives someone the feeling that one is to be a functional figurative expresion on two point of views refleting people that the huge scale of aspirations with which people communicate and look after one other. Furethermore, on how our mutual understanding and reciprocal action could be proportioned whether its system gives people any advantages or not.
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