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@book{ Dolata2022,
 title = {Platform Architectures: The Structuration of Platform Companies on the Internet},
 author = {Dolata, Ulrich and Schrape, Jan-Felix},
 year = {2022},
 series = {Research contributions to organizational sociology and innovation studies / Stuttgarter Beiträge zur Organisations- und Innovationssoziologie : SOI discussion paper},
 pages = {30},
 volume = {2022-01},
 address = {Stuttgart},
 publisher = {Universität Stuttgart, Fak. 10 Wirtschafts- und Sozialwissenschaften, Institut für Sozialwissenschaften Abt. VI Organisations- und Innovationssoziologie},
 issn = {2191-4990},
 urn = {https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:0168-ssoar-76901-4},
 abstract = {Today's internet is shaped largely by privately operated platforms of various kinds. This paper asks how the various commercially operated communication, market, consumption and service platforms can be grasped as a distinct organizational form of enterprise. To this end, we make a basic distinction between (1) the platform-operating companies as organizing and structuring cores whose goal is to run a profitable business, and (2) the platforms belonging to these companies as more or less extensive, rule-based and strongly technically mediated social action spaces. While platform companies are essentially organizations in an almost archetypical sense, the internet platforms they operate constitute socio-technically structured social, market, consumption or service spaces in which social actors interact on the basis of detailed and technically framed rules, albeit, at the same time, in a varied and idiosyncratic manner. The thesis of this paper is that the coordination, control and exploitation mechanisms characteristic of the platform architectures are characterized by a strong hierarchical orientation in which elements of co-optation and the orchestrated participation of users are embedded. In this hybrid constellation, the platform companies have a high degree of structure-giving, rule-setting and controlling power - in addition to exclusive access to the raw data material generated there. While this power may manifest, at times, as rigid control, direct coercion or en-forceable accountability, for the majority of rule-obeying users it unfolds nearly imperceptibly and largely silently beneath the surface of a (supposed) openness that likewise characterizes the platforms as technically mediated spaces for social and economic exchange.},
 keywords = {Internet; Internet; Medienökonomie; media economy; soziale Beziehungen; social relations; Koordination; coordination; Informationsverwertung; information utilization; Kapitalismus; capitalism; Unternehmensform; type of enterprise; Organisationsform; type of organization; soziotechnisches System; sociotechnical system}}