Cita:
Jordá, B., Cañedo, A., Bene, M., & Goyanes, M. (2021). Out-of-Place Content: How Repetitive, Offensive, and Opinion-Challenging Social Media Posts Shape Users’ Unfriending Strategies in Spain. In Social Sciences (Vol. 10, Issue 12, p. 460). MDPI AG.
Patrocinador:
Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España)
Agradecimientos:
This work was supported by the National Program of I+D+I (RTI2018-096065-B-I00)
oriented to the Challenges of Society and the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) about
“Nuevos valores, gobernanza, financiación y servicios audiovisuales públicos para la sociedad de
Internet: contrastes europeos y españoles.”Azahara Cañedo receives funding from the European
Regional Development Fund (ERDF), call 2020/3771. Márton Bene is a recipient of the Bolyai János
Research Fellowship awarded by the Hungarian Academy of Sciences (BO/334_20).
Proyecto:
Gobierno de España. RTI2018-096065-B-I00
Palabras clave:
Public value
,
Social exchange theory
,
Social media
,
Tolerance
,
Unfriending
Filtering strategies enable social media users to remove undesired content from their
feeds, potentially creating homophilic environments. Although previous studies have addressed the
individual-level factors and content features that influence these decisioFiltering strategies enable social media users to remove undesired content from their
feeds, potentially creating homophilic environments. Although previous studies have addressed the
individual-level factors and content features that influence these decisions, few have solely focused
on users’ perceptions. Accordingly, this study applies social exchange theory to understand how
users socially construct the process of unfriending. Based on 30 in-depth interviews with young
Spaniards, we identify a widespread pattern of rejection over repetitive, opinion-challenging, and
offensive posts, which we conceptualize as out-of-place content, a type of social media stimulus that
hinders substantive online exchanges and challenges users’ understanding of social reality and
individual values. This study contributes to current literature on unfriending by suggesting that
filtering strategies are implemented gradually when posts overwhelm users’ tolerance threshold.
Our findings also suggest that their deployment hinges on the closeness of the relationship between
peers and social commitments formed in specific platforms. Future research is needed to assess to
what extent the patterns identified in our interviews are present in the overall population.[+][-]