Wijaya, Bambang Sukma
Graduate School of Communication, Bakrie University

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APPSNOGRAPHY: Observing the Practices of Using Digital Applications in Five Technocultural Aspects Wijaya, Bambang Sukma
Journal Communication Spectrum: Capturing New Perspectives in Communication Vol 7, No 1 (2017): February - July 2017
Publisher : Department of Communication Science, Bakrie University

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.36782/jcs.v12i1.2366

Abstract

The development of digital application technology has given rise to distinctive phenomena in using and consuming digital applications. User experiences can vary and even be unique. This article focuses on five aspects of observing naturally, authentically, and in detail regarding digital application use: techno-physical, techno-sociocultural, techno-discursive, techno-communicative, and techno-mediality. Apart from being a methodological reference for researchers, this article also provides valuable insights for designers and managers of digital applications. To cite this article (7th APA style): Wijaya, B. S. (2017). Appsnography: Observing the Practices of Using Digital Applications in Five Technocultural Aspects. Journal Communication Spectrum: Capturing New Perspectives in Communication 7(1), 74-83. https://doi.org/10.36782/jcs.v7i1.2366 
Social Escape or Concealment of Sins? The Communication Corruption Analysis of the Secondary Social Media Account Use Nasution, Asri Annisa; Wijaya, Bambang Sukma
Journal Communication Spectrum: Capturing New Perspectives in Communication Vol 13, No 2 (2023): August 2023 - January 2024 (Special Edition)
Publisher : Department of Communication Science, Bakrie University

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.36782/jcs.v13i2.2581

Abstract

The overuse of social media has given rise to having secondary accounts on one platform. Various studies have found motives for double accounts, especially on Instagram, such as identity disguise, personal use, creative expression, and privacy. More-login can help manage multiple accounts while maintaining anonymity and security, making it easier for users to explore various aspects of their online presence. Fake Instagram accounts (often called ‘finsta’) are also widespread. Apart from personal motives, there are also ‘professional’. Motives that lead to crime. This article highlights the use of multiple accounts in the context of communication corruption by dissecting aspects of corrupt messages, media misuse, context exploitation, and corrupt behaviour. A case study approach by analysing two participants secondary accounts in depth, accompanied by interviews, digital observations,and document searches, indicates that message corruption occurs in the form of content manipulation, both visual and verbal, concealment of facts, and euphemisms for evil—media corruption by impersonating social media accounts and using media to inflate one’s meaning. Context corruption occurs in inauthentic impression management and misleading public views toward a particular self- picture. Corrupt behaviour is indicated by intentions, motives, and obsession with concealing self-facts and constructing a false social image. The practice of multiple accounts implies that users not only have a ‘other world’ that is free, authentic, and sometimes anti-mainstream but also an image and life imprisoned by the social eye on the other side. So, the second account can be called a social escape room. This research is novel because it first examines the second account phenomenon from the perspective of communication corruption theory with its various consequences. To cite this article (7th APA style): Nasution, A. A. & Wijaya, B. S. (2023). Social escape or concealment of sins? The communication corruption: Analysis of the secondary social media account use. Journal Communication Spectrum: Capturing New Perspectives in Communication 13(2), 106-114. http://dx.doi.org/10.36782/jcs.v13i2.2100