“…Borgmann makes a distinction between instrumental, commodified and final communities and argues that virtual communities can at best be instrumental or commodified, because they do not contain "the fullness of reality, the bodily presence of persons and the commanding presence of things" found in final communities [Borgmann, 2004, p. 63]. In a similar fashion Barney [2004] sees virtual communities as inferior due to their lack of physical practices, and Dreyfus is critical of what he describes as the nihilist, irresponsible and often uninformed nature of virtual communities [Dreyfus, 2004]. Winner, finally, has criticized the fact that any kind of online network is called a community, since this broad definition ignores the importance of "obligations, responsibilities, constraints, and mounds of sheer work that real communities involve" [Winner, 1997, p. 17].…”