dc.description.abstract | This thesis aims to understand how meanings are constructed during technosecurity by
the Facebook environment. In an attempt to complement the construction of the research
problem, specific objectives are determined to articulate discussions related to privacy and security in digital culture from the perspective of technoculture audiovisualities; to formulate the concept of “technosecurity” as a symptom of contemporary technoculture, which spreads through and beyond the media, producing an ambience; and finally, to authenticate meanings of security and privacy enunciated by Facebook's interfaces. Our approach uses a methodological itinerary that deals with a contagion of initiatives, with the unfolding of cartography we were inspired by the movement of the flâneur, showing seven collections created from elective affinities that emerge from our observation, indicating that the object assumes two orders: that of materiality, referring to the path through the platform and parallel interfaces, and the order of virtualities, or the ethicities and imaginaries that emerge from the framed agencies. We authenticate some ethicities that are updated in frames and frames of meaning associated with imaginaries that communicate meanings of surveillance, security, childhood, care, fear, protection, trust, judicialization and anonymity. As our investigation demonstrates, the photograph of the technosecurity galaxy by the FB environment is formed by three constellations: Programmed Trust, Vulnerable User and Contemporary Technosecurity Ambience. We understand as part of the research contribution an identification of the construction of a multifaceted profile of the user that runs through this environment according to the ethics circumstantiated by the interface. We understand that FB would be a complex object of frames, ethicities and framings that carry meanings, revealing imaginaries of FB itself, but not just restricted to it, but as a symptom of contemporary digital culture, in which it is a constituent part and feeds back to remain operating based on the identity senses typical of technosecurity. It is in these constructs that they are updated in virtualities that make up a complex architecture, constantly recalling memories from the interface images carefully developed to build trust through a dichotomous promise between freedom and control. | en |