Linguistic Capitalism and Algorithmic Mediation

Google’s highly successful business model is based on selling words that appear in search queries. Organizing several million auctions per minute, the company has created the first global linguistic market and demonstrated thatlinguistic capitalismis a lucrative business domain, one in which billion...

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Veröffentlicht in:Representations (Berkeley, Calif.) Calif.), 2014-08, Vol.127 (1), p.57-63
1. Verfasser: Kaplan, Frederic
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Google’s highly successful business model is based on selling words that appear in search queries. Organizing several million auctions per minute, the company has created the first global linguistic market and demonstrated thatlinguistic capitalismis a lucrative business domain, one in which billions of dollars can be realized per year. Google’s services need to be interpreted from this perspective. This article argues that linguistic capitalism implies not aneconomy of attentionbut aneconomy of expression.As several million users worldwide daily express themselves through one of Google’s interfaces, the texts they produce are systematically mediated by algorithms. In this new context, natural languages could progressively evolve to seamlessly integrate the linguistic biases of algorithms and the economical constraints of the global linguistic economy.
ISSN:0734-6018
1533-855X
DOI:10.1525/rep.2014.127.1.57