TY - JOUR
T1 - The ambivalent ontology of digital artifacts
AU - Kallinikos, Jannis
AU - Aaltonen, Aleksi
AU - Marton, Attila
PY - 2013/6
Y1 - 2013/6
N2 - Digital artifacts are embedded in wider and constantly shifting ecosystems such that they become increasingly editable, interactive, reprogrammable, and distributable. This state of flux and constant transfiguration renders the value and utility of these artifacts contingent on shifting webs of functional relations with other artifacts across specific contexts and organizations. By the same token, it apportions control over the development and use of these artifacts over a range of dispersed stakeholders and makes their management a complex technical and social undertaking. These ideas are illustrated with reference to (1) provenance and authenticity of digital documents within the overall context of archiving and social memory and (2) the content dynamics occasioned by the findability of content mediated by Internet search engines. We conclude that the steady change and transfiguration of digital artifacts signal a shift of epochal dimensions that calls for rethinking some of the inherited wisdom in IS research and practice.
AB - Digital artifacts are embedded in wider and constantly shifting ecosystems such that they become increasingly editable, interactive, reprogrammable, and distributable. This state of flux and constant transfiguration renders the value and utility of these artifacts contingent on shifting webs of functional relations with other artifacts across specific contexts and organizations. By the same token, it apportions control over the development and use of these artifacts over a range of dispersed stakeholders and makes their management a complex technical and social undertaking. These ideas are illustrated with reference to (1) provenance and authenticity of digital documents within the overall context of archiving and social memory and (2) the content dynamics occasioned by the findability of content mediated by Internet search engines. We conclude that the steady change and transfiguration of digital artifacts signal a shift of epochal dimensions that calls for rethinking some of the inherited wisdom in IS research and practice.
KW - Archives
KW - Change
KW - Digital artifacts
KW - Digital objects
KW - Information platforms and infrastructures
KW - Modularity
KW - Reflexivity
KW - Search engines
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UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=84876837817&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.25300/MISQ/2013/37.2.02
DO - 10.25300/MISQ/2013/37.2.02
M3 - Review article
AN - SCOPUS:84876837817
SN - 0276-7783
VL - 37
SP - 357
EP - 370
JO - MIS Quarterly: Management Information Systems
JF - MIS Quarterly: Management Information Systems
IS - 2
ER -