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Springtime Everywhere - 7 octobre 2020
In prioritizing clarity and smoothness in its representation, Google Earth supports how we are consuming the planet “If you look at Google Earth, it’s springtime everywhere,” explains Gopal Shah, Google Earth’s product manager, in a YouTube interview. In a TED talk he boasts that Google Earth is “cloud-free,” since (...)

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Automatic for the Bosses - 17 juillet 2020
Workers may be more affected by robots taking their bosses’ jobs than their own Generally speaking, the four economic sectors in the U.S. that rely most heavily on human labor are, in order of most people employed : retail, fast food, health care, and clerical office work. These are jobs that involve interacting — (...)

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Well-intentioned data science can still reinforce unjust ideas about whose bodies matter - 19 décembre 2019
Over the past few years, my work as a Ph.D. student has increasingly focused on how classification and data-oriented approaches to the world can cause harm, particularly to queer and/or trans lives. From biases caused by underrepresentation to the fundamental difficulty of representing queerness in machine (...)

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The Captured City - 24 novembre 2019
The “smart city” makes infrastructure and surveillance indistinguishable You can’t go about your day anymore without tripping over smart stuff — smart refrigerators, smart toothbrushes, smart locks, smart whatever. All this smartness usually amounts to equipping the previously dumb thing with sensors that collect (...)

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Recorded for Quality Assurance - 5 octobre 2019
The datafication of affect in the call-center industry "This call may be recorded for quality assurance." Surely you’ve encountered this signature phrase of the call-center industry, possibly after a long wait on hold trying to get an answer to why you’re internet won’t work or why your medical bills weren’t (...)

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Wi-fi is outdated and makes users vulnerable to data capture. Why do we still depend on it ? - 15 mars 2019
Is the data that flows across the internet liquid, like a stream ? Or is it more like a superhighway, but with surfers ? The hackneyed similes we use to make sense of our lives online obscure as much as they reveal. This is partly a problem of form. The invisible networks that govern our digital "traffic" "” a (...)