|
Human Values
in the Design and Use of the Internet: Groupware for Community
Maria Bakardjieva
Faculty of Communication and Culture
University of Calgary
Canada
Andrew Feenberg
Philosophy Department
San Diego State University
USA
The objective
of this paper is the further development of the concept of "virtual
community" in the context of Internet design and use. We understand
"community" in the strong sense as a scene of long-term interactions
on which a large share of human development occurs. As such it is
a fundamental human value and deserves a prominent place in the
field of computer ethics.
The practice
of virtual community is also related to the prospects for democracy
in the information age. The democratization of the Internet involves
not merely the economics of participation, but also the ability
of ordinary people to express themselves and pursue meaningful experiences
in the virtual worlds created by computer communication. We believe
the vitality of online community is one significant index of the
democratization of the Internet.
Unlike work-oriented
groupware, community applications on the Internet have emerged spontaneously
for the most part and there has been little study of how different
types of software impact online community life. But we believe that
the adequacy of the software support for network communities will
be among the decisive factors determining whether they will succeed
in becoming a widely accepted means to reliable and consequential
relationships and cooperative action with others. Without such support,
network communities may remain in the category of those technical
possibilities that emerge for a short historical instant and then
fall into oblivion. As commercial interest in online community begins
to emerge, groupware intended for community-building proliferates
on different platforms and in different formats. A new field of
software development - "groupware for community" - is starting to
take shape.
Our research,
funded by the US National Science Foundation, aims at contributing
to this new field by focusing attention on the ethical dimensions
of online community. We address three central questions:
- How familiar
moral concepts are reconstructed as the basis of online community
in the unusual network environment.
- How experiences
with computer networks relate to the everyday lives of users.
- What technical
features and designs of computer networks support and facilitate
the activities and values identified in (1) and (2).
In the first
part of the paper we review the history of community practice and
the evolution of groupware for community on computer networks. We
identify the contexts in which such practices and groupware have
emerged and the actors involved in their social construction.
The study reported
in the second part of the paper examines in depth one particular
virtual community - a self-help mailing list. The research methodology
includes observation and discourse analysis of the verbal interactions
in this online community and online and off-line interviews with
its moderator and participants. The data are used to understand
what participation in virtual communities means to these people,
as well as how it fits into the larger picture of their lives. Relationships
between the specific groupware community members utilize and the
ethical quality of their interactions are identified and evaluated.
Our analysis
reveals that the existence of voluntary online communities, such
as the one we examined, is critically dependant on the emergence
of a reliable system of ethical norms. In fact, people turn to their
virtual community because it represents an ethical environment they
can predict and control as opposed to the precarious ethics of their
surrounding world. Software can help or obstruct the emergence and
maintenance of ethical norms in a decisive way. The lack of flexibility
and community-friendliness in mailing-list software sometimes creates
serious difficulties for participants in upholding the ethical standards
of their community. We identify some of these difficulties and propose
ways in which they can be eliminated by alternative software designs.
We provide guidelines for designers and organizers who face the
challenge of constructing viable virtual communities.
For further
communication, please contact either myself, or
Prof. Andrew Feenberg
Philosophy Dept.
San Diego State Univ.
San Diego,
CA 92182-8142
USA
feenberg@sdsu.edu
Maria Bakardjieva
Assistant Professor Faculty of Communication and Culture
University of Calgary
2500 University Drive NW
Calgary, Alberta
Canada T2N 1N4
Back
to Accepted Papers
Back to Top
|