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[Commlist] Call For ICA 2023 Panelists: Platforms, Power and a Theory of Friction
Thu Oct 06 20:44:38 GMT 2022
*“Call For ICA 2023 Panelists: Platforms, Power and a Theory of Friction***
Pawel Popiel, (ppopiel /at/ asc.upenn.edu) <mailto:(ppopiel /at/ asc.upenn.edu)>
I’m co-organizing a panel for ICA 2023 that positions the removal and/or
creation of friction through policy, design and business practices, as
an orienting lens to understand platform capitalism and platform power.
We are looking for two more panelists and are particularly interested in
scholars who study labor surveillance, datafication, climate change and
smart cities.
Once you’ve read the abstract below, if you are interested, please email
Pawel Popiel ((ppopiel /at/ asc.upenn.edu) <mailto:(ppopiel /at/ asc.upenn.edu)>) and
Krishnan Vasudevan ((kvasu /at/ umd.edu) <mailto:(kvasu /at/ umd.edu)>) with a brief
description of your paper and how your work would contribute to the
understanding of friction.
Abstract
Technology platform companies, from Amazon to Uber, require the constant
flow of user data to maximize profits and fuel their growth. The
dependency of their business models on these uninterrupted data flows
creates incentives for platform companies to remove any and all
frictions that impede their accumulation of capital, including by
facilitating user data surrender and obscuring data collection practices
through user-friendly design and opposing policies that may regulate or
disrupt these data flows. Communication scholars have begun to explore
how technology platforms seek to maintain fluid marketplaces through
such "frictionless" practices and strategies. For example, Popiel & Sang
(2021) examined how platform companies lobby for "frictionless
regulations" like public-private partnerships that naturalize platform
business models, while privileging their business considerations over
democratic values. Vasudevan (2020) examined how platforms employ
"frictionless design" to addict end-users to platforms by deploying
deceptive interactive features. In this panel, we build upon recent
scholarship about friction and frictionless practices employed by
technology platforms by examining the construct in the context of labor
surveillance, datafication, platform regulation, and climate change. By
situating “friction” within a more expansive theoretical context, this
panel will offer scholars an adaptable, orienting construct for
examining platform power. More broadly, this panel will provide scholars
a meaningful lens through which to understand how platform capitalism in
the current epoch seeks to erode socio-technical and political frictions
that are crucial to a functioning democracy.”
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