produces results essentially qualitative making their
analysis more difficult and their interpretation more
subjective. Although its goal is to bring out aspects
that are difficult to identify and cover areas that
traditionally receive little attention, e.g., values and
culture in technology, studies on possible means of
formalizing and measuring its results are welcome.
Values are intertwined to each other through
complex relationships and these relationships need
to be clarified. Thus, it is difficult to involve values
in the project of technologies if they are considered
in isolation. When considering (or neglecting) a
certain value, other values can be positive or
negatively affected. For instance, depending on the
way the value of meta-communication is being
technically supported in a project, it can affect
differently the value of accessibility, either making it
more difficult (e.g., offering only explanation
through sounds) or promoting it (e.g., offering
multiple media, such as text, images, video, sound).
Consequently, besides the identification of the
relationship among values, if we are to offer
resources for supporting designers to understand and
involve values in their projects, we also need suggest
how these values could be technically supported in
their systems. For instance, autonomy is a critical
value especially in systems related to the exercise of
citizenship, and it has a clear relationship with the
values of accessibility, usability, identity, emotion
and affection, and so on. Mapping this value to a
technical feature is a challenging task not even
always possible.
Finally, although a key artifact, the VF4SS alone
is not enough to guarantee an effective consideration
of values in social software design. Indeed, as the
experiment described in this paper showed, other
artifacts, methods and tools are needed in order to
allow the articulation and involvement of values
during the different stages of a system development
(e.g., the stakeholder identification artifact). We are
naming value-oriented approach (VOA) such set of
tools and artifacts we are investigating in ongoing
and further research.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
This research is partially funded by FAPESP
(#2009/11888-7) and CNPq through the EcoWeb
Project (#560044/2010-0). The authors specially
thank the designers who collaborated with the
evaluation activity and authorized the use of the
documentation of their projects in this paper.
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