Ghosted by the drug trade: a digital ethnography of absence, ethics, and epistemic friction on Tinder
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This Research Note reflects on a digital ethnography project that set out to explore whether, and in what ways, dating app Tinder is used in the online drug trade. Despite a carefully crafted six-month study involving ethically transparent research profiles and off-platform recruitment attempts, no direct contact with drug vendors was established, and no explicit traces of illicit activity were observed. Rather than treating this outcome as a failure, the project is reframed as a site of methodological and epistemological inquiry rooted in digital ethnography, with particular attention to the challenges of conducting reflexive fieldwork in obscured, platform-mediated environments. It highlights the tensions—epistemic frictions—between researcher visibility, platform affordances, and the deliberate opacity of illicit economies. The Note details the initial research design and subsequent methodological pivots while reflecting on failure, ethical transparency, and how absence can become a meaningfulobject of analysis. It offers insights into how digital ethnographers might respond reflexively to inaccessible digital fields and develop strategies for engaging with phenomena that resist capture. Crucially, it argues that absence should not be read merely as methodological failure but as a reflection of how disciplinary assumptions and platform-specific affordances shape what can, and cannot, be known.