Open Access
Data Politics and Infrastructural Design
Author(s) -
Ned Rossiter,
Soenke Zehle
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
a peer-reviewed journal about --
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2245-7755
DOI - 10.7146/aprja.v4i1.116101
Subject(s) - situated , agency (philosophy) , politics , process (computing) , natural (archaeology) , subject (documents) , computer science , subject matter , sociology , political science , world wide web , geography , social science , artificial intelligence , pedagogy , archaeology , law , curriculum , operating system
The current celebration of invisible design strategies claims to be the inevitable next iteration of a process that deliberately deemphasizes autonomous user agency to ‘empower’ ever-more efficient forms of interaction through natural interfaces. It makes sense to move outward from the user, now situated and redefined as a node of multiple infrastructures. Yet rather than focusing on this networked self, we instead see a critical purchase through analyses of how overlapping infrastructures constitute the user as a new kind of economic and epistemological subject. Such an undertaking is no longer a matter of making visible the invisible. Part of what needs to happen is an exploration of how the digital economy changes the way we understand and constitute infrastructure.