Algorithmic Experts: Selling Algorithmic Lore on YouTube
Top Cited Papers
Open Access
- 21 January 2020
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Social Media + Society
- Vol. 6 (1)
- https://doi.org/10.1177/2056305119897323
Abstract
This article considers the growing influence of self-styled algorithmic “experts.” Experts build valuable brands, accumulate notoriety, and piece together careers by selling theorizations of algorithmic visibility on YouTube to aspiring and established creators. They function as intermediaries between sanctioned YouTube industries and the agency of cultural producers. Expertise is developed through research, strategies, and theories to help content creators mitigate platform-specific risks, particularly the risk of algorithmic invisibility. Experts develop entrepreneurial self-brands and position themselves as YouTube’s adversaries, performing “experiments” ostensibly to reveal or translate hidden algorithmic signals or correct “misleading” information. However, ultimately, they teach creators to be complicit with YouTube’s organizational strategies and business models. Studying algorithmic experts reveals insights into how new media producers negotiate platform visibility, but also speaks to long-standing questions about how the management of risk in cultural industries shapes symbolic production. I draw on a 3-year ethnography of YouTube industries to illustrate how experts interpret and instruct in how to become algorithmically (and advertiser) compliant on YouTube. In addition, I highlight their broader role as de facto producers and gatekeepers for aspiring and existing content producers. Meritocratic logic flows through experts’ outputs—meaning expertise is limited to individualized and patchwork solutions that do not address the significant socio-economic inequalities that are still inherent on social media platforms.Keywords
This publication has 39 references indexed in Scilit:
- Curation by code: Infomediaries and the data mining of tasteEuropean Journal of Cultural Studies, 2015
- The romance of work: Gender and aspirational labour in the digital culture industriesInternational Journal of Cultural Studies, 2015
- Recommended for you: The Netflix Prize and the production of algorithmic cultureNew Media & Society, 2014
- Meritocracy as Plutocracy: The Marketising of 'Equality' Under NeoliberalismNew Formations, 2013
- Calculative Cultural Expertise? Consultants and Politics in the UK Cultural SectorSociology, 2013
- CRITICAL QUESTIONS FOR BIG DATAInformation, Communication & Society, 2012
- “White and Nerdy”: Computers, Race, and the Nerd StereotypeThe Journal of Popular Culture, 2011
- On mediators: Intellectuals and the ideas trade in the knowledge societyEconomy and Society, 2004
- THE WORK OF CULTURAL INTERMEDIARIES AND THE ENDURING DISTANCE BETWEEN PRODUCTION AND CONSUMPTIONCultural Studies, 2002
- Conceptualizing culture as commodity: The problem of televisionCritical Studies in Mass Communication, 1986