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Digital hoarding

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Digital hoarding (also known as e-hoarding) is excessive acquisition and reluctance to delete electronic material no longer valuable to the user. The behavior includes the mass storage of digital artifacts and the retainment of unnecessary or irrelevant electronic data. The term is increasingly common in pop culture, used to describe the habitual characteristics of compulsive hoarding, but in cyberspace. As with physical space in which excess items are described as "clutter" or "junk," excess digital media is often referred to as "digital clutter."[1][2][3]

Virtual spaces

Digital hoarding occurs in any electronic spaces where information is stored. These are common areas where digital clutter may exist:

A cluttered email inbox arises when a user does not have a system for archiving some messages and deleting others that are no longer wanted. Electronic documents can become clutter if a user does not delete extraneous files, or if the files are poorly organized (e.g. inconsistent folder structure, empty folders).

Some social media platforms also provide opportunity for digital hoarding. On the social networking site Facebook, for example, one can accumulate a vast number of “friends” that may merely be acquaintances or lapsed contacts.[4] Groups and Pages can also contribute to clutter when users join and like new ones, respectively, without leaving or unfollowing those in which they are no longer interested.[4]

Causes

Digital hoarding stems from a variety of individual traits and habits, corporate conditions, and societal trends:

  • Some individuals experience anxiety when faced with disposing of digital items,[5] particularly if they fear losing something important.[6]
  • Many digital hoarders don't know how to organize their digital content or aren't in the habit of doing so, and they lack a methodology for determining which content is worth keeping.[5]
  • Keeping all of one's digital files requires less time and effort than evaluating and deleting them.[7]
  • Many businesses rely on email correspondence for decision-making and formal approvals, so employees are often careful to keep work emails in case they are needed to verify a decision later.
  • Data storage devices are now so large and inexpensive that individuals and companies often do not feel the need to save data selectively.[8][9]
  • The widespread availability and rapid dissemination of open content on the Internet makes it easier for users to obtain digital media, which can accumulate more quickly than ever.
  • Since digital media do not take up physical space, they're less likely to be perceived as clutter, and users can more easily forget the extent of what they own.
  • Unlike many physical items, electronic content does not die or decay on its own; users must consciously choose to delete it.[10]

Repercussions

Digital hoarding can lead to many problems:

  • Excessive digital content takes up more hard drive space than it merits, and may even require the addition of extra digital storage to one’s computer or mobile phone.
  • Excessive content causes daily system backup procedures to take longer.[8]
  • Digital clutter can make it more difficult to locate specific files among the extra irrelevant material.
  • Server farms use more electricity as they store more digital data. The extra load is especially notable in corporate domains.[11] This adds to an individual’s or company’s electricity expenses and carbon footprint.[11]
  • Digital clutter can be mentally draining, requiring time and attention. For example, hoarded emails can make an inbox seem overwhelming. The user wastes time sifting through excess emails, which can result in lowered employee productivity.[12]
  • Digital hoarding can create an unhealthy attachment to digital content and foster a sort of “media addiction.”[1] It is often good for one’s mental health to let go of useless clutter, and decluttering digital devices can help with decluttering the mind.[13]

In the media

Many American documentary television series depict the struggles of compulsive hoarders, such as "Hoarding: Buried Alive" on TLC and "Hoarders" on A&E. These shows have popularized awareness of hoarding, showing the consequences of accumulating clutter. However, these programs usually focus on physical hoarding. The WPTV story of Fort Lauderdale, Florida, resident Larry Fisher is a notable exception. This program focused on digital hoarding, depicting Fisher's longstanding refusal to delete any digital content. Instead, Fisher purchased an additional computer every time he ran out of hard drive space.[14] The BBC News story of Washington, D.C., resident Chris Yurista expresses a counterpoint to this perspective. The program portrayed Yurista as a "21st century minimalist" for living with hardly any physical assets, substituting digital goods wherever possible.[15]

Criticism

Though digital hoarding is often given a negative connotation, some counter that it is not an unhealthy or detrimental practice. One argument states that a large amount of digital content is not a problem in itself; rather, the problem is content findability. The size of the World Wide Web illustrates this point: a vast amount of content is available, but search engines such as Google have mastered effective algorithms for instantaneous findability. Digital hoarding can also be logical for email correspondence. Businesses often use email as the primary form of communication, so deleting conversations and documents that seem unimportant could be problematic if they are needed later.[16] Disk storage is increasingly abundant and inexpensive, so concern over the cost of digital hoarding is rarely necessary. In addition, digital hoarding is clearly more benign than physical hoarding, which is more visible and takes up physical space.[7] Finally, on a subjective level, digital hoarding can hardly be viewed as problematic if the consumer simply does not feel burdened by their collection of digital data.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Alan, Henry. "How to Break Your Media Addiction and Clean Up Your Digital Clutter". Lifehacker.
  2. ^ Becker, Joshua. "25 Areas of Digital Clutter to Minimalize". Becoming Minimalist.
  3. ^ "Putting an End to Digital Clutter" (PDF). Trend Micro.
  4. ^ a b Cabellon, Ed. "Stop Digital Hoarding". EDUniverse.
  5. ^ a b Beck, Melinda. "Drowning in Email, Photos, Files? Hoarding Goes Digital". The Wall Street Journal.
  6. ^ Davidson, Jim. "Combating 5 Signs of Digital Hoarding Behavior". ClickZ.
  7. ^ a b Case, Amber. "Digital Hoarding". Cyborg Anthropology.
  8. ^ a b "Definition of: e-hoarder". PCMag.
  9. ^ Gatchelian, Gayle. "Hoarding the ethereal: How we have more things (and more problems) but with less clutter" (PDF). Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
  10. ^ Fogarty, Kevin. "Digital Hoarding: Do We Have a Problem?". Network Computing.
  11. ^ a b Sloane, Stanton D. "The Problem With Packrats:The High Costs Of Digital Hoarding". Forbes.
  12. ^ Egan, Marsha. "Pro: Don't Litter In Your Electronic Yard". Bloomberg Businessweek.
  13. ^ Hill, Simon. "Is Digital Hoarding Dragging You Down?". Digital Trends.
  14. ^ Anfinsen, Jason. "E-hoarding is a new phenomenon that is quickly spreading amongst computer users". WPTV.
  15. ^ Danzico, Matthew. "Cult of less: Living out of a hard drive". BBC News.
  16. ^ Waller, John. "Con: Why Delete That Which Takes Up No Space?". Bloomberg Businessweek.

Further reading

  • Mayer-Schönberger, Viktor (2010). Delete: The Virtue of Forgetting in the Digital Age. Princeton: Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0691150369.