Copyright © the author(s) 2016. Web 2.0 has placed prosumption at the very centre of economic value creation. Digital prosumption has been usually associated with user-generated content. However, recent studies argue for a need to also treat user generated data as a form of prosumption labour, as it is the appropriation and exploitation of these data that fuels digital capitalism. In this paper I analyze self-tracking as a form of digital prosumption. When people use the increasingly popular self-tracking devices, they produce huge amounts of data about themselves, referred to as self-quantification, which firms draw on to create value. The paper aims to expand on the notion of data production as prosumption labour by focusing on self-quant...
Self-tracking is not new but it has been practiced with pen and paper for a long time. Digital devic...
This paper was presented at Paper Session 6a: Free Labour in the Web 2.0 Era. Since the hybrid produ...
In this article we discuss the social side of self-tracking. Technologies that allow users to keep t...
Web 2.0 has placed prosumption at the very centre of economic value creation. Digital prosumption ha...
The concept of ‘self-tracking’ (also referred to as life-logging, the quantified self, personal anal...
The marketing literature has both celebrated and critically scrutinised the active engagement of con...
The use of wearable biosensors to track many aspects of life has been received with great enthusiasm...
This paper extends prior critical discussions of digital prosumption by demonstrating that prosumer ...
The purpose of this research is to explore the nature of an emerging practice known as ‘prosumption’...
The use of biosensors in wearable activity tracking devices to measure, record and share many aspect...
In this article, we draw on theories of biopolitical marketing to explore claims that personal data ...
The recent evolution of users’ position and agency in digital environments absorbs the attention of ...
Implementation of quantified self technologies in workplaces relies on the ontological premise of Ca...
In this article, we draw on theories of biopolitical marketing to explore claims that personal data ...
Since the First Industrial Revolution, consumers have been mainly considered as playing a passive ro...
Self-tracking is not new but it has been practiced with pen and paper for a long time. Digital devic...
This paper was presented at Paper Session 6a: Free Labour in the Web 2.0 Era. Since the hybrid produ...
In this article we discuss the social side of self-tracking. Technologies that allow users to keep t...
Web 2.0 has placed prosumption at the very centre of economic value creation. Digital prosumption ha...
The concept of ‘self-tracking’ (also referred to as life-logging, the quantified self, personal anal...
The marketing literature has both celebrated and critically scrutinised the active engagement of con...
The use of wearable biosensors to track many aspects of life has been received with great enthusiasm...
This paper extends prior critical discussions of digital prosumption by demonstrating that prosumer ...
The purpose of this research is to explore the nature of an emerging practice known as ‘prosumption’...
The use of biosensors in wearable activity tracking devices to measure, record and share many aspect...
In this article, we draw on theories of biopolitical marketing to explore claims that personal data ...
The recent evolution of users’ position and agency in digital environments absorbs the attention of ...
Implementation of quantified self technologies in workplaces relies on the ontological premise of Ca...
In this article, we draw on theories of biopolitical marketing to explore claims that personal data ...
Since the First Industrial Revolution, consumers have been mainly considered as playing a passive ro...
Self-tracking is not new but it has been practiced with pen and paper for a long time. Digital devic...
This paper was presented at Paper Session 6a: Free Labour in the Web 2.0 Era. Since the hybrid produ...
In this article we discuss the social side of self-tracking. Technologies that allow users to keep t...