September Monthly Speaker Series - Dr Annika Aebli
Schedule
Thu Sep 26 2024 at 12:00 pm to 01:00 pm
UTC-07:00Location
458, Terrace Lab. Irving Barber Learning Center | Vancouver, BC
About this Event
*Attendance in-person is highly recommended, however, a Zoom link will be sent out to attendees who are unable to attend in-person.
Abstract:
The conflict between cryptocurrencies’ ideological promises and their practical reality has recently become a considerable topic of scholarly discussion. It has been framed in terms of the so-called ‘promissory gap’ of cryptocurrencies – a gap that is founded in the contrast between the promises of a ‘trust-free’ system and actual reality. Yet, while crypto’s notion of ‘trust-free’ money has been heavily questioned, there is little research on how users seek to overcome cryptocurrencies’ promissory gap. Contrary to the promises of being ‘trust-free’ by design, this paper demonstrates that struggles for trust and control represent a focal point of the community interactions surrounding crypto. By drawing upon Dervin’s sensemaking methodology to conduct interviews with crypto investors, this study examines how social actors attempt to construct ‘bridges’ over a ‘gap-filled’ reality related to the moment of a historical crisis in crypto. The results reveal crypto’s intricate social embeddedness: whilst unequal power dynamics, distrust, and conflicting interests represent primary elements of users’ struggles in the crypto space, users attempt to restore a sense of control by recalling personal motivations and connecting with like-minded people. The paper provides insights into crypto users’ strategies to construct meaning in a highly uncertain environment and contributes to the discussion of crypto as a socially structured phenomenon.
Bio:
Annika is a postdoctoral social scientist and digital ethnographer in blockchain & crypto spaces and an affiliate at the Persuasive Tech Lab, University of Lausanne in Switzerland. Her research interests revolve around questions of trust and community-building in emerging socio-technical systems. She is particularly curious about how individuals build trust in “trustless” blockchain spaces, social dynamics in digital worlds, and cognitive approaches to digital culture studies. She is currently working on a large-scale research project, funded by Optimism (an Ethereum-based layer 2 blockchain solution), that investigates identity fusion & social bonding in pseudonymous blockchain spaces.
Annika obtained a PhD in Economics and Social Sciences from the Leuphana University Lueneburg in Germany in 2020.
Where is it happening?
458, Terrace Lab. Irving Barber Learning Center, 1961 East Mall, Vancouver, CanadaEvent Location & Nearby Stays:
CAD 0.00