Eero’s Error: Selling myself on Facebook, Framer Mag. 1# (2011)

Selling art is about selling the self. By buying art audiences fulfill hidden desires, take part in exotic adventures and promote politics their own status would not permit. Owning someone’s work is the safest way to participate in their life story. Much like in the stock markets, the brand is in focus and what the artist says in public affects the value. Investments in living artists are risky – we inevitably blurt out something to devalue the brand. The internet makes protecting the personal brand difficult since audiences have access to behind the scenes status updates, which prove people are equally foolish. Because of this, smart netizens on Facebook use clever puns as names that leave the uninitiated out of the loop, while avoiding insults caused by rejected “friendship requests”. As I decided to join this smart class, I had to decide what to do with my existing profile. It’d become socially toxic waste. There is no social etiquette to retreating from social media. I decided to do as all corporation stuck with toxic waste: I started to trade with it.

Selling virtual good like World of Warcraft accounts is an expanding industry, so there definitely is a marked for my product. Imagine a Japanese school girl using a bearded Finnish mans Facebook profile in a live-action role-play scenario. I settled for the price of 1,143€ per friend, so I would get 450 euros for 392 friends. I placed a screen capture of my profile page on the Finnish eBay, Huuto.net, and went to bed fantasizing of profits. In the morning, I regretted what I’d done and told friends about it. Instead of being offended, they liked it and started bidding. The only ones objecting my sale were Facebooks Terms of Service – as a Huuto.net clerk told me after removing my ad. I also found out that creative traders had long been selling Facebook profiles, when I found online threads from early 2007. I dug deeper and got into a conversation with a trader.

Colleenaoanton: so u need profile?
Me: Jep. With some 500 friends. Possibly with EU identity
Colleenaoanton: ya, okey. I will show u now.
Me: Send me a screenshot if you have one. How much?
Colleenaoanton: 5€ per 100 friends.
Me: Ok. I’ll contact you after lunch.

There are possibly millions of virtual characters and identities for sale out here. Because of the quantity, there are bound to be situations where these “virtual characters” played by viral marketing company employees or bots end up selling Viagra for each others. Potent tradesmen.

A surprising consequence of my attempt to sell my Facebook profile was that I gained more friends. My value is rising. My puny attempts is nothing compared to the man who placed all of his belongings on Huuto.net with the promotional slogan: “When the stuff’s sold, I’ll leave were the palm-trees grow”. He eventually sold everything for 44 007€. As people focused on the hero of the story, the guy who bought the other man’s life has remained silent. He simply continued the game where the other logged off.

NO-CHAIR-DESIGN: For bloggers and the press

The world does not need new chairs – Designing new ones only takes time from REPAIRING the ones we already have. Consider this the ultimate sustainable design challenge and an opportunity to promote open design.

We have challenged the designers of the world to NOT design chairs the next year. It’s that simple!

For designers who feel they cant cope with a year of not designing new stuff we have made a tutorial on: “How NOT to Design Chairs”. It is available both as a video and on instructables:

Video “Tutorial”:

http://vimeo.com/etsaaunohtaa/no-chair-design

Instructables:

http://www.instructables.com/id/How-NOT-to-Design-Chairs/

The project has been presented next to design fairs in Helsinki, the next World Design Capital. For the fair presentations we also made an invisible chair to support the cause:

Video “Invisible Chair”:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e7s9MJMIPAM

The campaign is a part of the Alternative Design Capital 2012 project which is hooking urban activist, open designers and artist to host a series of events which run parallel to the official WDC program.

Alternative Design Capital:

http://wiki.pixelache.ac/alt-wdc-planning/home

The idea here is to make de-growth sexy. Instead of creating innovations to solve current economical and ecological challenges we should merely select which of the cultural practices we are engaged with are worth continuing.

NCD-C Images:

http://www.flickr.com/photos/jukkapalmu/sets/72157627272634290/

The campaign is run by a small arts and crafts research unit by the name of Ore.e Refineries which has specialized in grassroots urban development projects like “smithing in public spaces”.

Ore.e Ref:

http://oree.storijapan.net

Smithing in public spaces:

http://oree.storijapan.net/pictorial_workshop1/

(Note the vintage look of the website is functional as it only takes some 100kb to load.)

All the best from Finland,

In behalf of Ore.e Ref.

Eero Yli-Vakkuri (Head of management and sails)