稀缺
审查
数字内容
代理(哲学)
用户生成的内容
价值(数学)
计算机科学
冠军
生产(经济)
个性化
推荐系统
合理使用
保证
数字经济
内容(测量理论)
持续性
社会化媒体
媒体内容
数字媒体
内容创建
互联网隐私
万维网
多样性(政治)
资源(消歧)
平衡(能力)
重新使用
业务
背景(考古学)
知识管理
新媒体
收入
标识
DOI:10.1080/01972243.2025.2610938
摘要
Platforms often champion user value as the primary objective to optimize for in recommender systems. However, as commercial marketplaces platforms must also balance the interests of other stakeholders, such as advertisers, creators, investors, and regulators. This easily creates conflicts of interest – whose value is more important to consider in recommendation systems. To address this issue, I develop a moral economy framework to platform studies that integrates studies of content recommendation with theories of fair allocation of recourses. Drawing on examples from digital media platforms, I show how three prominent rentier mechanisms shape which kind of content and creators that are likely to gain visibility, attract attention and conversely, acquire economic capital. The findings demonstrate that platforms often override user agency by promoting the content the platforms want users to see, blur distinctions between organic and paid recommendations, and create artificial scarcity by favoring commercially lucrative creators. These practices raise concerns about the sustainability of original content production versus standardized and derivative output, fueled in part by generative AI, and the marginalization of critical and diverse voices. As platforms continue to dominate digital media distribution, their moral economies warrant closer scrutiny to preserve original, diverse and critical perspectives in society.
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