The Ambivalent Ontology of Digital Artifacts1
London School of Economics and Political Science · Hanken School of Economics · +1 more institution
Abstract
Digital artifacts are embedded in wider and constantly shifting ecosystems such that they become increasingly editable, interactive, reprogrammable, and distributable. This state of flux and constant transfiguration renders the value and utility of these artifacts contingent on shifting webs of functional relations with other artifacts across specific contexts and organizations. By the same token, it apportions control over the development and use of these artifacts over a range of dispersed stakeholders and makes their management a complex technical and social undertaking. These ideas are illustrated with reference to (1) provenance and authenticity of digital documents within the overall context of archiving…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 72.34
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 74
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Ontology
- Ambivalence
- Computer science
- Information retrieval
- Data science
- Epistemology
- World Wide Web
- Psychology
- Life in Land