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[ecrea] CFP: All Things in Moderation
Tue Aug 15 17:10:59 GMT 2017
All Things in Moderation
The People, Practices and Politics of Online Content Review – Human and
Machine
December 6-7, 2017
on the campus of the University of California, Los Angeles Los Angeles,
California, USA
Call for Participation/Proposals
Proposals due September 15, 2017
Notifications October 1, 2017
https://atm-ucla2017.net
*Background: Commercial Content Moderation and the Present Moment *
The phenomena, policies and material realities of workers involved in
commercial content moderation (Roberts, 2014; 2017) – the organized,
industrial-scale process of adjudication of online user-generated
content - have made global headlines in the first part of 2017 at a
level previously unseen in the public sphere. In the wake of a 2016
American Presidential election, the role of social media platforms and
the information they circulate online was largely questioned by a public
concerned, for the first time in significant numbers, about the nature
of the production of their social media content. It saw the introduction
of terms like “fake news” into the general discourse. Subsequently in
the first half of 2017, a series of highly publicized and violent,
tragic events followed that were broadcast, in some cases, live to the
world, on Facebook and other social media platforms, once again raising
public questions about what and how material circulates online and who,
if anyone, is doing the gatekeeping.
Additionally, several public revelations – many already known to
researchers and many through the work of journalists – also came to
light related to content moderation practices, including the fact that
much of the labor of these adjudication processes is undertaken not by
sophisticated AI and deep learning algorithms, but by poorly paid human
beings who risk burnout, desensitization and worse due to the nature of
their work. Facebook and platforms like it have been beset by leaks in
the pages of major newspapers such as The Guardian (Solon, 2017) and Die
Süddeutsche Zeitung (Grasseger and Krause, 2017) from disgruntled
commercial content moderators, eager to make the public aware of their
role and their working conditions. In Germany and Austria, legal
channels have been employed to force social media platforms to respond
to laws prohibiting the circulation of hate-related content (as defined
in those jurisdictions), while other governments seek to restrict the
speech of their citizens on seemingly less benign political grounds and
ask Facebook and others to manage this need. On December 30, 2016, a
landmark lawsuit was filed on behalf of two Microsoft employees who both
claim that they have been rendered completely disabled by PTSD as a
result of their moderation work.
In short, commercial content moderation – the firms that supply it, the
companies that need it and the employees who undertake it – is having a
moment. The topic has seized the public’s consciousness across academic,
journalistic, technological and policy-making sectors, despite continued
opacity, obfuscation and an unwillingness to discuss it on the part of
social media firms who rely on such practices to function. It is a
moment of particular and rare opportunity that offers interested parties the
chance to not only propose solutions to the problems raised by content
moderation at such large, global industrial scope and scale, but indeed
to reframe the kinds of questions that could and should be asked
regarding such phenomena and all their implications.
*All Things in Moderation: A CCM Event *
All Things in Moderation is envisioned as a specialized symposium on all
things commercial content moderation: its policies, procedures, and
people. This two-day event brings together scholars, students, policy
makers, activists, journalists and members of industry, all of whom have
particular concern and relationships to CCM work, the impacts of social
media, and its influence on social, political and economic spheres.
During the two days on site at UCLA, participants will engage in panels,
roundtables and talks from parties who come to CCM from a variety of
disciplines, sectors and points of intervention. Activities will include
plenaries with journalists who endeavor to cover CCM and the tech
industry, at large, and CCM workers themselves, willing to share their
experiences and insight with others. In addition, the program will
include keynote talks from key researchers, advocates and insiders
working in this area.
This first-of-its-kind event is largely experimental, and so will rely
heavily on the energy and expertise of participants. We look forward to
the knowledge that you will bring to the symposium, and see it as both a
chance to take the pulse of CCM as practiced and studied, as well as a
means to develop a roadmap for CCM’s future.
To this end, participants are encouraged to submit paper proposals,
panel proposals, roundtable proposals and other contributions as
appropriate. There will also be opportunities to workshop and share
formally and informally, around CCM from a variety of different key
approaches, to include:
Some areas of concentration envisioned by organizers include (but need
not be limited to):
·CCM and Policy: human rights; internet governance; transparency and
control online; national cases; transnational CCM (e.g., Taylor, 2016)
·CCM and/as Labor: workplace practices; internal policies; worker mental
health and wellness; workers’ rights; outsourcing, globalization and
contract labor; CCM work and identity (race/gender/class/sexual
orientation/ability/ethnicity) (e.g., Crawford and Gillespie, 2014)
·CCM Automation: algorithmic mechanisms; machine learning and training;
computer vision; automated CCM tools and techniques
·CCM and the Law: US and international cyberlaw and its applications to
CCM; lawsuits; EU and other governmental legislation; CCM as repression
and speech restriction (e.g., Klonick, 2017)
·Histories of Moderation: online moderation pre-CCM; histories of online
communities; comparative moderation studies (e.g., Postigo, 2009)
·Covering CCM: journalism and reporting on CCM and on tech; doing
academic research on CCM
*Who Should Attend *
All Things in Moderation welcomes participants from across academic
disciplines and research areas, such as information studies, sociology,
legal studies, history, data science, computer vision, media studies,
communication, policy studies, globalization studies and others. It also
welcomes journalists, policy analysts, lawyers, engineers, programmers
and anyone with an interest in CCM work and workers.
*To Submit a Proposal/Register *
Proposals can take the form of:
·Paper proposals – with preference for emergent work and/or work-in-process
·Panel proposals – made up of presentations organized thematically
around a particular CCMissue or concern; submit a description of the
panel and its component parts
·Roundtable proposals: hands-on, interactive sessions devoted to
discussion and knowledge-sharing of the current state of affairs
regarding CCM and a particular area of concentration (e.g.,EU
regulations and CCM, 2017)
·Lightning talks – short, provocative idea sharing sessions of five
minutes (or less)
·Other interventions – something that doesn’t adequately fit into these
boxes that you would liketo share (please describe; to be planned in
conversation with organizers)
*Proposals should not exceed 300 words and should be submitted via the
conference registration site.*
*Proposals are due SEPTEMBER 15, 2017*. *Registration closes OCTOBER 31,
2017*.
*Costs *
Thanks to the generous support of the UCLA Graduate School of Education
& Information Studies, *conference registration is free*. Lodging and
travel information and options can be found at the conference website;
participants will be responsible for their own accommodations and travel
costs. *SPACE IS LIMITED *in order to keep this event productive and
successful. Please submit your proposal and register as early as
possible in order to secure your place. Priority given to those
registrants who submit proposals.
Hope to see you in December.
Convener: Sarah T. Roberts, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor
University of California, Los Angeles
Department of Information Studies
Graduate School of Education & Information Studies
Conference Coordinator: Patricia Ciccone
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