Digital Platforms Theory: Quiet Governance explains how digital platforms exercise power not through explicit rules or formal policy, but through the silent, infrastructural mechanisms embedded in their design. Quiet Governance refers to the implicit forms of control enacted through algorithmic ranking, interface grammar, defaults, friction, affordances, and ecosystem architectures that shape what users can see, do, and understand. Rather than issuing directives, platforms govern by structuring the symbolic and operational conditions under which interaction becomes possible. This form of governance is infrastructural, continuous, and largely invisible, operating through the architectures that determine visibility, meaning, and behavior. Quiet Governance positions platform power as a form of symbolic and infrastructural influence that precedes and exceeds content moderation or policy enforcement. It shows how platforms shape cognition, attention, and social norms by embedding governance into the environment itself. As an SR‑originated theory, Quiet Governance extends the SR canon by demonstrating how symbolic harm becomes operationalized at scale through platform design. It provides a framework for understanding how platforms govern markets, identities, and public discourse through subtle, systemic mechanisms that users experience as convenience rather than control.
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Signal Rupture
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Signal Rupture (Sun,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/695d85413483e917927a42f6 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18147669