ABSTRACT

Data has emerged as a key component that determines how interactions across the world are structured, mediated and represented. This book examines these new data publics and the areas in which they become operative, via analysis of politics, geographies, environments and social media platforms.

By claiming to offer a mechanism to translate every conceivable occurrence into an abstract code that can be endlessly manipulated, digitally processed data has caused conventional reference systems which hinge on our ability to mark points of origin, to rapidly implode. Authors from a range of disciplines provide insights into such a political economy of data capitalism; the political possibilities of techno-logics beyond data appropriation and data refusal; questions of visual, spatial and geographical organization; emergent ways of life and the environments that sustain them; and the current challenges of data publics, which is explored via case studies of three of the most influential platforms in the social media economy today: Facebook, Instagram and Whatsapp.

Data Publics will be of great interest to academics and students in the fields of computer science, philosophy, sociology, media and communication studies, architecture, visual culture, art and design, and urban and cultural studies.

chapter |25 pages

Introduction

part I|65 pages

Politics

chapter 1|19 pages

In praise of plasticity

Underspecification, anarchism, machine learning

part II|74 pages

Environments

chapter 4|21 pages

Unearthly domain

The enigmatic data publics of satellites

chapter 5|12 pages

Sensing air, creaturing data

chapter 6|19 pages

Offsite

Data, migration, landscape, materiality

chapter 7|20 pages

Fracking sociality

Architecture, real estate, and the internet’s new urbanism

part III|61 pages

Platforms

chapter 8|23 pages

Platform urbanism

City-making in the age of platforms

chapter 10|15 pages

Publics or post-publics?

Contemporary expression after the mobile phone