Living with Monsters? Social Implications of Algorithmic Phenomena, Hybrid Agency, and the Performativity of Technology IFIP WG 8.2 Working Conference on the Interaction of Information Systems and the Organization, IS&O 2018, San Francisco, CA, USA, December 11–12, 2018
Conference papers
We Have Been Assimilated: Some Principles for Thinking About Algorithmic Systems
Abstract : This text is an opinion piece motivated by an invited keynote address at the 2018 IFIP 8.2 working conference, ‘Living with Monsters?’ (San Francisco, CA, 11 December 2018.) It outlines some principles for understanding algorithmic systems and considers their implications for the increasingly algorithm-driven infrastructures we currently inhabit. It advances four principles exhibited by algorithmic systems: (i) radical complexity, (ii) opacity, (iii) radical otherness, and (iv) infrastructuration or Borgian assimilation. These principles may help to guide a more critical appreciation of the emergent world marked by hybrid agency, accelerating feedback loops, and ever-expanding infrastructures to which we have been all too willingly assimilated.
https://hal.inria.fr/hal-02083584 Contributor : Hal IfipConnect in order to contact the contributor Submitted on : Friday, March 29, 2019 - 10:20:16 AM Last modification on : Thursday, February 25, 2021 - 9:46:05 AM Long-term archiving on: : Sunday, June 30, 2019 - 1:38:25 PM
Paul Edwards. We Have Been Assimilated: Some Principles for Thinking About Algorithmic Systems. Working Conference on Information Systems and Organizations (IS&O), Dec 2018, San Francisco, CA, United States. pp.19-27, ⟨10.1007/978-3-030-04091-8_3⟩. ⟨hal-02083584⟩