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"Dialing it Back:" Shadowbanning, Invisible Digital Labor, and how Marginalized Content Creators Attempt to Mitigate the Impacts of Opaque Platform Governance

  • Sena A. Kojah
  • , Ben Zefeng Zhang
  • , Carolina Are
  • , Daniel Delmonaco
  • , Oliver L. Haimson
  • University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
  • Northumbria University
  • Rutgers - The State University of New Jersey, New Brunswick

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

11 Scopus citations

Abstract

Content creators with marginalized identities are disproportionately affected by shadowbanning on social media platforms, which impacts their economic prospects online. Through a diary study and interviews with eight marginalized content creators who are women, pole dancers, plus size, and/or LGBTQIA+, this paper examines how content creators with marginalized identities experience shadowbanning. We highlight the labor and economic inequalities of shadowbanning, and the resulting invisible online labor that marginalized creators often must perform. We identify three types of invisible labor that marginalized content creators engage in to mitigate shadowbanning and sustain their online presence: mental and emotional labor, misdirected labor, and community labor. We conclude that even though marginalized content creators engaged in cross-platform collaborative labor and personal mental/emotional labor to mitigate the impacts of shadowbanning, it was insufficient to prevent uncertainty and economic precarity created by algorithmic opacity and ambiguity.

Original languageEnglish
Article numberGROUP12
JournalProceedings of the ACM on Human-Computer Interaction
Volume9
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 10 2025

Keywords

  • content creator collaboration
  • content moderation
  • invisible labor
  • marginalized identities
  • shadowbanning

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