Constructing the check-in: Reflections on photo-taking among Foursquare users

In this article, we explore the social construction of geomedia in relation to mobile photo-taking. The article draws from a study of location-sensitive mobile social networking and search and recommendation service Foursquare in Melbourne and New York City. The study utilized photo elicitation techniques, with each participant asked to provide photographs they associated with their own Foursquare check-ins, accompanied by written responses to questions designed to encourage them to reflect upon their motivations for recording and uploading each image. What emerged from our analysis of how participants discussed the construction of their Foursquare check-ins, were certain consistencies with the findings of prior work on Foursquare (e.g. to register a new venue or a nice meal, as part of exercises in self-expression, and to record memory traces). Strikingly, though, we also noticed something subtly yet significantly different in relation to photo use. Many of the submitted images and accompanying explanations revealed a particular sensitivity toward the local and the familiar, and a desire to capture “a mood, a feeling”—an “ordinary affect.” In light of this, in this article we are interested in the tension that exists between designed or intended uses of Foursquare, the social appropriation and shaping that is undertaken by Foursquare’s end-users, and the technological and strategic business adjustments that are undertaken by Foursquare in response.

[1]  Stewart,et al.  Ordinary Affects , 2020, Ordinary Affects.

[2]  K. Stewart Afterword: Worlding Refrains , 2020, The Affect Theory Reader.

[3]  Stuart Allan,et al.  Everyday imagery , 2018 .

[4]  Christian Fuchs,et al.  Internet surveillance after Snowden: A critical empirical study of computer experts' attitudes on commercial and state surveillance of the Internet and social media post-Edward Snowden , 2017, J. Inf. Commun. Ethics Soc..

[5]  Michael Saker,et al.  Foursquare and identity: Checking-in and presenting the self through location , 2017, New Media Soc..

[6]  Leighton Evans,et al.  Location-Based Social Media: Space, Time and Identity , 2017 .

[7]  Eva Hornecker,et al.  Blurring boundaries between everyday life and pervasive gaming: an interview study of ingress , 2016, MUM.

[8]  Deborah Lupton,et al.  The affective intensities of datafied space , 2016 .

[9]  Edgar Gómez Cruz,et al.  Trajectories: digital/visual data on the move , 2016 .

[10]  Edgar Gómez Cruz Photo-genic assemblages : Photography as a connective interface , 2016 .

[11]  Katharina Lobinger,et al.  Photographs as things – photographs of things. A texto-material perspective on photo-sharing practices , 2016 .

[12]  Jordan Frith,et al.  Here, I Used to Be , 2016 .

[13]  Raz Schwartz,et al.  The spatial self: Location-based identity performance on social media , 2015, New Media Soc..

[14]  D. Trottier Big Data Ambivalence: Visions and Risks in Practice , 2014 .

[15]  Jordan Frith,et al.  Communicating Through Location: The Understood Meaning of the Foursquare Check-In , 2014, J. Comput. Mediat. Commun..

[16]  S. Pink,et al.  New visualities and the digital wayfarer: Reconceptualizing camera phone photography and locative media , 2014 .

[17]  André Jansson Mediatization and Social Space: Reconstructing Mediatization for the Transmedia Age , 2013 .

[18]  Larissa Hjorth,et al.  Emplaced Cartographies: Reconceptualising Camera Phone Practices in an Age of Locative Media , 2012 .

[19]  Lee Humphreys,et al.  Connecting, Coordinating, Cataloguing: Communicative Practices on Mobile Social Networks , 2012 .

[20]  Andrew Hogue,et al.  Recommending interesting events in real-time with foursquare check-ins , 2012, RecSys.

[21]  Carlos Barreneche,et al.  Governing the geocoded world: Environmentality and the politics of location platforms , 2012 .

[22]  Michael E. Gardiner Henri Lefebvre and the ‘Sociology of Boredom’ , 2012 .

[23]  K. Chamberlain,et al.  The Power of Things , 2011 .

[24]  David Bissell,et al.  Passenger Mobilities: Affective Atmospheres and the Sociality of Public Transport , 2010 .

[25]  Susan Murray,et al.  Digital Images, Photo-Sharing, and Our Shifting Notions of Everyday Aesthetics , 2008 .

[26]  B. Anderson Time-stilled space-slowed: how boredom matters , 2004 .

[27]  Douglas A. Harper,et al.  Talking about pictures: A case for photo elicitation , 2002 .

[28]  Ben Highmore,et al.  Everyday Life and Cultural Theory: An Introduction , 2002 .

[29]  Leighton Evans,et al.  Locative Social Media: Place in the Digital Age , 2015 .

[30]  Leah A. Lievrouw,et al.  New Media Design and Development: Diffusion of Innovations v Social Shaping of Technology , 2010 .