[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]
[Commlist] CFP: Genealogies of online content identification
Mon May 06 12:58:31 GMT 2019
Call for papers
Genealogies of online content identification
Special issue of Internet Histories: Digital Technology, Culture and Society
(guest editors: Maria Eriksson & Guillaume Heuguet)
*Due date for abstract submission: 1 August 2019.*
In today’s digital landscape, cultural content such as texts, films,
images, and recorded sounds are increasingly subjected to automatic (or
semi-automatic) processes of identification and classification. On a
daily basis, spam filters scan heaps of emails in order to separate
legit and illegit textual messages,1 algorithms analyze years of
user-uploaded film on YouTube in search for copyright violations,2 and
software systems scrutinize millions of images on social media sites in
order to detect sexually offensive content.3 To an increasing extent,
content identification systems are also trained to distinguish
“fake-news” from “proper journalism” on news websites,4 and taught to
recognize and filter violent or hateful content that circulates online.5
These examples reveal how machines and algorithmic systems are
increasingly utilized to make complex cultural judgements regarding
cultural content. Indeed, it could be argued that the wide-ranging
adoption of content identification tools is constructing new ontologies
of culture and regimes of truth in the online domain. When put to
action, content identification technologies are trusted with the ability
to separate good/bad forms of communication and used to secure the
value, authenticity, origin, and ownership of content. Such efforts are
deeply embedded in constructions of knowledge, new forms of political
governance, and not least global market transactions. Content
identification tools now make up an essential part of the online data
economy by protecting the interests of rights holders and forwarding the
mathematization, objectification, and commodification of cultural
productions.
Parallel to their increased pervasiveness and influence, however,
content identification systems have also been heavily contested. Debates
regarding automatic content identification tools recently gained
momentum due to the European Union’s decision to update its copyright
laws. A newly adopted EU directive encourages all platform owners to
implement automatic content filters in order to safeguard copyrights6
and critics have argued that such measures run the risk of seriously
hampering the freedom of speech and stifling cultural expressions
online.7 High profile tech figures such as Tim Berners Lee (commonly
known as one of the founders of the Internet) has even claimed that the
widespread adoption of content filtering could effectively destroy the
internet as we know it.8 Content identification systems, then, are not
neutral devices but key sites where the moral, juridical, economical,
and cultural implications of wide-ranging systems of online surveillance
are currently negotiated and put to the test.
This special issue welcomes contributions that trace the lineage and
genealogy of online content identification tools and explores how
content identification systems enact cultural values. It also explores
how content identification technologies reconfigure systems of knowledge
and power in the online domain. We especially invite submissions that
reflect on the ways in which content identification systems are deployed
to domesticate and control online cultural content, establish new and
data-driven infrastructural systems for the treatment of cultural data,
and bring about changes in the activity/status of cultural workers and
rights holders. Contributions that locate online content identification
tools within a longer historical trajectory of identification
technologies are also especially welcomed, since digital content
identification tools must be understood as continuations of analogue
techniques for monitoring and measuring the qualities and identities of
things.
We envision contributors to be active in the fields of media history,
software studies, media studies, media archaeology, social anthropology,
science and technology studies, and related scientific domains. The
topic of contributions may include, but are not limited to:
*
The historical and political implications of content identification
tools for audio, video, images, and textual content such as machine
learning systems and digital watermarking or fingerprinting tools
*
The genealogy of spam filters, fake news detection systems, and
other strategies for keeping the internet “clean” and
censoring/regulating the circulation and availability of online content
*
Comparative investigations of the technical workings of different
methods for identifying content, including discussions on the
challenges and potentials of indexing/identifying sound, images,
texts and audiovisual content
*
Reviews of the scientific theories, political ideologies, and
business logics that sustain and legitimize online systems of
content identification
*
Reflections on historical and analogue techniques for identifying
objects and commodities, such as paper watermarks and the use of
signets and stamps
*
Issues of censorship related to online content identification and
moderation and/or discussions regarding the ethical dilemmas and
legal debates that surround content surveillance
*
Explorations of the implications of algorithmic judgements and
measurements of identity, and reflections on the ways in which
content identification tools redefine what is means to listen/see
and transform how cultural objects are imagined and valued
*
Examinations of the relationship between human and algorithmic
efforts to identify suspect content online and moderate information
flows
Submissions
Abstracts of a maximum of 750 words should be emailed to Maria
Eriksson ((maria.c.eriksson /at/ umu.se) <mailto:(maria.c.eriksson /at/ umu.se)>)
and Guillaume Heuguet ((guillaume.heuguet /at/ sorbonne-nouvelle.fr)
<mailto:(guillaume.heuguet /at/ sorbonne-nouvelle.fr)>) no later than 1
August 2019. Notification about acceptance to submit an article will
be sent out by 1 September 2019. Authors of accepted abstracts are
invited to submit an article by 1 February 2020. Final versions of
articles are asked to keep within a 6,000 word limit. Please note
that acceptance of abstract does not ensure final publication as all
articles must go through the journal’s usual review process.
Time schedule
*
1 August 2019: due date for abstracts
*
1 September 2019: notification of acceptance
*
1 February 2020: accepted articles to be submitted for review
*
Feb-April 2020: review process and revisions
About the guest-editors
Guillaume Heuguet defended a dissertation in 2018 on music and media
capitalism based on a longitudinal analysis of YouTube’s strategy
and products, including its Content ID system (to be published by
the French National Archives in 2019). He is currently an associated
researcher at GRIPIC (Sorbonne Université) and Irmeccen (Sorbonne
Nouvelle). He runs the music journal Audimat and has edited a
forthcoming book entitled Anthology of Popular Music Studies in
French (Philharmonie de Paris, 2019).
Maria Eriksson is a doctoral candidate in media studies at Umeå
University, Sweden who is currently spending time as a visiting
scholar at the department of arts, media and philosophy at Basel
University in Switzerland. She has a background in social
anthropology and her main research interests concern the politics of
software and the role of algorithms in managing the logistics and
distribution of cultural content online. She is one of the
co-authors of the book Spotify Teardown: Inside the Black Box of
Streaming Music (MIT Press, 2019) and has previously co-edited
special issues in journals such as Culture Unbound.
Link to the online version of the call for papers:
https://think.taylorandfrancis.com/internet-histories-genealogies-online-content-identification/?utm_source=CPB_think&utm_medium=cms&utm_campaign=JOD09539
More information on Internet Histories: Digital Technology, Culture and
Society can be found at https://www.tandfonline.com/loi/rint20.
Notes
1 Brunton, Finn. Spam: A Shadow History of the Internet. Cambridge &
London: MIT Press, 2013.
2 https://support.google.com/youtube/answer/2797370?hl=en
3
https://www.theverge.com/2018/12/3/18123752/tumblr-adult-content-porn-ban-date-explicit-changes- why-safe-mode
<https://www.theverge.com/2018/12/3/18123752/tumblr-adult-content-porn-ban-date-explicit-changes->
4
https://thenewstack.io/mit-algorithm-sniffs-out-sites-dedicated-to-fake-news/
5
https://www.gouvernement.fr/la-france-engage-une-experimentation-inedite-en-matiere-de-regulation-appliquee-aux-contenus-haineux
<https://www.gouvernement.fr/la-france-engage-une-experimentation-inedite-en-matiere-de-regulation-> and
https://www.letelegramme.fr/france/internet-des-amendes-pour-les-plateformes-qui-laissent-des-contenus-haineux-21-02-2019-12213979.php
<https://www.letelegramme.fr/france/internet-des-amendes-pour-les->
6 http://europa.eu/rapid/press-release_IP-16-3010_en.htm
7
https://www.ivir.nl/publicaties/download/Academics_Against_Press_Publishers_Right.pdf
8 https://www.eff.org/files/2018/06/13/article13letter.pdf
---------------
The COMMLIST
---------------
This mailing list is a free service offered by Nico Carpentier. Please use it responsibly and wisely.
--
To subscribe or unsubscribe, please visit http://commlist.org/
--
Before sending a posting request, please always read the guidelines at http://commlist.org/
--
To contact the mailing list manager:
Email: (nico.carpentier /at/ vub.ac.be)
URL: http://nicocarpentier.net
---------------
[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]