Networked identity

by Lilia Efimova on April 20, 2005

A bit more from Adrian Miles, on how we are written by our blogs:

Where does your blog begin and end? The answer is not the date of the first and most recent post. You have links out of your blog, is the ‘end’ of your blog what lies at the destination of that link (after all it is ‘your’ link)? And what if that link leads somewhere else? What about all the links into your blog, these also ‘write’ your blog, and these are not written by you.

This is, if we make it simpler, your blog identity. It is who you are as a blogger. This is also, very much, your network identity. This is the some of the relations you establish and are established outside of you by your participation in the network. This network is radically outside of you in ways that existing networks aren’t. Your existing networks are largely defined by spatial proximity – same class, suburb, bus, workplace, and so on. Not here.

In other words your indentity if the sum of those connections that you are a participant in, but, you have little or no say. It is difficult, for example, to prevent someone else from linking to one of your blog posts, or to your blog. Just as they can’t really prevent you linking to them. You are written by this.

The questions that makes me wondering is Who constructs your identity? Not that I’m the best experts to judge it theory-wise, but I’m not sure that the way others could construct my identity from links to me is the same as my identity from my perspective. From my perspective “incoming links” matter, but it’s me who decides what role they play in a bigger picture…

Archived version of this entry is available at http://blog.mathemagenic.com/2005/04/20.html#a1555; comments are here.

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