OUR
DIGITAL
RIGHTS
TO THE
CITY
Edited by Joe Shaw & Mark Graham
Design by www.irenebeltrame.com
Published by Meatspace Press 2017
Creative Commons BY-NC-SA License.
ISBN 978-0-9955776-2-6
index
4
AN INFORMATIONAL RIGHT TO THE CITY?
Joe Shaw and Mark Graham
University of Oxford
6
ACCESS DENIED: SNAPSHOTS OF EXCLUSION
AND ENFORCEMENT IN THE SMART CITY
Jathan Sadowski
Arizona State University
12
THE JERUSALEMS ON THE MAP
Valentina Carraro and Bart Wissink
City University of Hong Kong
16
RENT, DATAFICATION, AND THE AUTOMATED
LANDLORD
Desiree Fields
University of Sheield
20
DIGITAL LABOURERS OF THE CITY, UNITE!
Kurt Iveson
University of Sydney
24
RE-POLITICIZING DATA
Taylor Shelton
University of Kentucky
28
THE #DIGITALLIBERTIES CROSS-PARTY
CAMPAIGN
Sophia Drakopoulou
Middlesex University
30
THE CITY IS OURS (IF WE DECIDE IT IS)
Mark Purcell
University of Washington
AN INFORMATIONAL RIGHT TO THE CITY?
Joe Shaw and Mark Graham
University of Oxford (
[email protected] /
[email protected])
Digital technologies and the people, machines, and information
they connect, have redeined
urban life in the twenty-irst century.
Everyday life is enmeshed by it. hroughout work, leisure, consumption and production; almost every thing and every
place is now mirrored, represented, mediated, or shared online as digital. Even
for those that profess to reject such technologies, their surrounding city’s social,
economic and material reality is now
unavoidably dependent upon electronic
lows of bits and bytes. Applications redirect individuals based on secret pathinding algorithms; review sites tell us which
are the best and worst neighbourhoods;
city governments and insurance agencies
have taken their operations to social media; city governance is ever more reliant
on ‘smart’ sensors and feedback mechanisms. Cities have become more than
bricks and mortar: they are their digital
presences, and they are constantly performed and reproduced as such.
Digital representations are but one example of how this situation can afect us all:
when you type the word “Jerusalem” into
Google you are shown an infobox declaring the city to be the “Capital of Israel”
(at the time of publication). No mater
your own view on this, it is contested:
the State of Israel is the only country on
4
Earth to recognise the city as Israel’s capital. Many Palestinians consider the city
to be the capital of the Palestinian State.
Much of the rest of the world either explicitly states that the city isn’t a capital,
or refuses to take a position on the issue.
Despite Google’s claimed objectivity, this
is but one example of the way in which
not all places are seen the same, and not
all people see the same place. Borders are
displayed diferently within the search
engine depending upon which country
the user views them from; businesses
engage in ‘radius bidding’ to subtly alert
users with the right proile to a diferent
service provider; entire neighbourhoods
appear devoid of activity, and risk becoming the informational ghetos of the
twenty-irst century.1
A lot of people interact with or
consume this information. Google
currently mediates over 90-95% of
search requests in Europe and the USA.
We believe that this dominant abstract
presence has the power to reproduce and
change our material reality. If you accept
this premise, then we need to ask important questions about what rights citizens
1
Shaw, J., and Graham, M. (2017)
An Informational Right to the City?
Antipode.
have to not just public and private spaces, but also their digital equivalents. How
do we disagree with these representations? How do we feel about an advertising agency like Google “organising the
world’s information”? If we aren’t happy,
then what are the alternatives?
In 1968, long before our digitally-augmented cities were ever enabled by the
likes of Google, the French philosopher
We believe that
this dominant
abstract presence
has the power
to reproduce
and hange our
material reality.
Henri Lefebvre outlined what he referred
to as a ‘right to the city.’ He believed that
the great potential of urban life should be
open to everyone, not just the powerful
elites and large corporations that own
and control so much of our cities. his
emphasis on reclaiming a more egalitarian and inclusive city was aimed at the
traditional mediators and drivers of urban politics and inequality – landlords,
the state and the police.
Whilst the ‘right to the city’ was never
intended to be pre-deined as a list of codiied laws, its embodiment as a demand or
a slogan against exclusion has resulted in
all sorts of shared beneits for urban citizens around the world. It has been used to
frame struggles for access to clean water
in South America, to sanitation in India,
for new rent control laws in Berlin, and
for batles for displacement compensation in South Africa. It doesn’t always
work, but in the right hands it can serve
as a powerful conceptual weapon for the
collective good – it can represent the
right to change ourselves by changing
the city.
If our cities are now digital as well as material, then the struggle for more egalitarian rights to the city must move beyond a
sole focus on material spaces and into the
realm of the digital. In the example above,
one concern might be the fact that corporate giants like Google mediate a vast
amount of information about our cities.
In other areas, it might be that other concerns arise, like the right to housing or
to employment. he socio-economic disruption entailed by technology has oten
been entwined with urban development,
but in the age of Uber; TripAdvisor; TaskRabbit; ‘Smart Cities’ and social media,
all these batles have taken on new forms.
his short collection of articles
explores the diferent way in
which information technologies
can reconigure, reproduce or amplify socio-economic injustices throughout our
cities – from smartphones to ID-cards,
and all sorts of applications that might
rent accommodation or sell labour. We,
the authors, believe that everyone needs
to consider these issues in order to live
a prosperous city life. And we hope that
this short pamphlet will help you, the
reader, be more informed and able to act
and interact with the digital world in a
way that will help you live in the kind of
city that you want.
5
ACCESS DENIED:
SNAPSHOTS OF EXCLUSION AND ENFORCEMENT IN THE SMART CITY
Jathan Sadowski
Delt University of Technology (
[email protected])
“Ask my guy how he thought travelling the world sound / Found it hard to
imagine he hadn’t been past downtown”
Common, “Respiration”
Not long ago the apartment complex
where I live decided to upgrade its security by installing gates at every entrance.
Opening these gates requires a plastic fob,
which works like a keycard (by pressing it
against a receiver at the pedestrian gate)
and like a garage door opener (by clicking a buton on it for the vehicle gate).
he new electronic entrances seemed unnecessary, but I thought they would just
be a minor inconvenience; one more step
to go through, another thing hanging on
my keychain.
However, as if to demonstrate how arbitrarily they can exercise control over
access to my apartment, the complex’s
managers did not ensure the security
system worked properly before installing
it. So for weeks my fob would only work
part of the time, efectively locking me
out of my home until a fellow resident
came along and let me in from the inside.
Or, if I were feeling adventurous, I could
atempt to climb the concrete wall and
metal gate. People began trying to prop
the gate open, but the complex’s workers were ordered to remove any props.
It didn’t mater that the control system
6
wasn’t operating the way it was intended. Its integrity had to be maintained and
its commands had to be obeyed.
he other residents and I were forced
to experience the exact frustration that
Gilles Deleuze described in his prescient
1992 essay “Postscript on the Societies
of Control”: “[Imagine] a city where one
would be able to leave one’s apartment,
one’s street, one’s neighborhood, thanks
to one’s (dividual) electronic card that
raises a given barrier; but the card could
just as easily be rejected on a given day
or between certain hours; what counts
is not the barrier but the computer that
tracks each person’s position—licit or
illicit—and efects a universal modulation.”1 When Deleuze originally wrote
this example it sounded like cyber-punk
science iction, but now it is a realistic description of modern cities.
Compared to other possible consequences of control, the electronic gates were
1
Deleuze, G. (1992). “Postscript
on the Societies of Control.” October 59
(Winter): 3-7.
only relatively inconvenient and annoying. But they illustrate the control logic
that colonizes everyday life, illing it with
checkpoints that regulate access and enforce exclusion. When everything matches up, when everything works smoothly and eiciently, we have no cause to
pause. We hardly notice the systems that
are constantly monitoring us—until they
decide your “password” is invalid.
In this essay, I describe three techno-political trends that are converging in powerful ways. By following the logic of
those trends I sketch two short snapshots
that portray plausible near futures. I end
by relecting on features of an informational right to the city that would help
derail the realization of these wicked outcomes. In short, my goal is to provide a
warning about where we are heading if
we do not change course.
TECHNO-POLITICAL TRENDS
1) Cities around the world are being
permeated with so-called “smart” systems composed of ubiquitous sensing,
data collection, real-time analytics, networked things, algorithmic processes,
and central command centers. As an urban planning and governance movement,
smart urbanism constructs the city as a
“system of systems”—which can be rendered legible and observable, treated as
knowable and understandable, subjected
to regimes of surveillance and control.
he aim is for people and places to be totally monitored, measured, and managed.
he smart city is not just a way of bringing the convenient and cool capabilities
of the smart home into the street; rather, this scaling-up involves a categorical
shit in the purpose and power of these
technological systems. hey are fundamentally about infrastructural and civic
applications. hey are the kind of systems that constitute the techno-political
ordering of society.2
2) Many powerful organizations—tech
companies, inance irms, and government agencies—are, as Marion Fourcade
and Kieran Healy put it, “culturally impelled by a data imperative and powerfully equipped with the tools to enact it.”3
his imperative demands the extraction
of all data, from all sources, in whatever
ways possible, whether there is current
use for it or not. Practices of dataveillance
have become so common and so varied
2
Sadowski, J. and Pasquale,
F. (2015). “he Spectrum of Control: A
Social heory of the Smart City.” First
Monday 20(7): online
3
Fourcade, M. and Healy, K.
(Forthcoming). “Seeing Like a Market.”
Socio-Economic Review. htp://kieranhealy.org/iles/papers/slam-2.pdf
7
that few people know about the systems
that target them in homes, stores, streets,
online, and nearly everywhere else. hese
systems are used to create data dossiers
about each of us, they fuse and analyze
data from many sources, they sort and
slice us into categories, and they do so
largely without our awareness and input.
3) People are subjected to innumerable
scoring systems—innumerable because
many of them are secretive products of
guarded industries like insurance, inance, and security. hese scores are
created by (propriety) algorithms applied to massive databases composed of
anywhere from hundreds to billions of
data points about individuals and groups.
Scores reduce people to single numbers
that are then used to assess, judge, rank,
classify, and stratify.4 A few examples
include: inancial scores that regulate ac4
Pasquale, F. (2015). he Black
Box Society: he Secret Algorithms that
Control Money and Information. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
8
cess to credit, employment and housing;
threat scores that alert police to the danger posed by a person, address, or area;
reputational scores that segment people
according to their consumer behavior, social standing, economic position, and political activities. Such scores are oten the
outcome of opaque processes, preventing
them from being challenged or changed.
Despite the long list of issues related to
accuracy and accountability, scoring systems continue to expand into more parts
of society.
IMMINENT FUTURES
he following snapshots are based on
only somewhat intensiied versions of
existing systems. hey are not outlandish ictions, scientiic or political. Nor are
they meant to be like the crystal ball predictions that naïve futurists peddle. he
short scenarios I portray are plausible
and achievable in the very near future.
he unnamed city in each snapshot is inluenced by a US context. However, precursors to the technologies and policies I
describe are present in cities around the
world. Similar situations are emerging in
places from London and Rio de Janeiro to
Johannesburg and Singapore.
Snapshot 1): “We’re sorry,” reads the
screen on the gated entry to the boutique
mall, “our systems indicate that your credit score is not suicient to enter this location. Access denied.” he gate’s auto-locks
engage, while notiications sent to private security forces alert them to a possible situation.
Few urban spaces are truly public anymore. Parks, monuments, neighborhoods,
and shopping areas are now products of
private management. hey are patrolled
by security forces, governed by conduct
codes, and enclosed by physical barriers.
he “business improvement districts”
used to carve out parts of the city—and
formally hand socio-political control of
them to private property owners—were
a step towards making cities more entrepreneurial. However, the managerial
problem plaguing these landlords remains the efective regulation of access.
hat is now changing thanks to smart
solutions. While they once had to rely on
reactive tactics like harassing people who
aren’t welcome, they now marshal proactive technologies against people with
the wrong proile. It is easier to prevent
access than to kick out.
With the help of data systems and automatic enforcement, the city is illed with
enclaves that impede or allow mobility.
hese checkpoints ensure that places
can be governed with surgical precision.
he credit score detectors target low-networth undesirables for ejection, while
also identifying high-net-worth VIPs
who will be given special atention and
perks. Your civic proile—the calculated
aggregation of all your “relevant activities,” whatever that means—may ward of
suspicion and (literally) open doors, or it
might trigger risk protocols like proactive searches and monitoring.
People are subjected to many other scoring systems. hey simultaneously expand
the horizons of some while constraining
the possibilities of others. he beauty of
score-based auto-enforcement is that the
right kinds of people no longer have to
deal with the security theater—and the
inconvenience and discomfort it produces—used to weed out and deter nuisances.
For others, though, the presence of inhumane, non-human security technologies
is bluntly apparent. But hey, if you work
hard, make responsible decisions, and
please the score-makers, then maybe you
too can experience the joys of a city where
the frictions of everyday life drop away.
Snapshot 2): “Alert! Due to your abnormally high threat score you are not permited to be in this zone. Exit immediately or be detained and deported.” he
announcement blares from the speakers
on the drone, drowning out the whir of
its quadcopter blades. he drone’s “sublethal” armaments—pepper spray balls,
dye markers, mid-range tasers—are more
than capable of subduing noncompliant
targets.
he old ways of keeping a community
safe were so crude and manpower intensive: nosy residents channeled their energy into being neighborhood watchers;
cops patrolled the streets in slow-rolling
cruisers; pedestrians were deemed suspicious if they it the description of an out-
9
sider. hese methods changed once cities
began instituting “safety zones,” which
designated certain areas of the city as
protected sectors that were a privilege to
enter, not a right. What signaled access?
Your data is the key to entry. here is no
longer a need to rely on biased proiling, when each person has a data dossier— which collates countless data points
and applies analytics to paint a picture of
your past, present, and future.
Moreover, a vast network of surveillance
systems continuously monitors, encodes,
and analyzes the city at multiple layers.
here is litle that happens without being
recorded. he ultimate goal is to break
free of spatial and temporal constraints
by capturing all data. With enough processing power and storage capacity, past
instances and future scenarios of the
city—not just a person—can be modeled
and examined. In efect, one can press rewind on the city, pause it at any point,
and watch it unfold over time. Or, hit
fast-forward and devise models used to
inform predictive policing and anticipatory planning. hese technologies provide police and city managers with powerful capacities for urban governance.
Rather than confronting the vagaries of
a chaotic system, they can bring order to
the city.
REFLECTIONS ON AN INFORMATIONAL RIGHT
By following current techno-political logics, we see how Information and
Communication Technology (ICT) systems can be used to promote further
stratiication, overt exclusion, and au-
10
tomatic enforcement.5 hese snapshots
should be seen as self-preventing prophecies. However, resisting the erosion of
democratic ideals like equity, access,
and fairness will not come easily. People
must be empowered and mobilized to act
against injustice and subjugation. One
method of doing so arises from airming
an informational right to the city. Such a
right ought to operate in multiple forms:
as a slogan, as a social movement, as a
political antagonism.
According to David Harvey, “he right to
the city is far more than the individual
liberty to access urban resources: it is a
right to change ourselves by changing
the city.”66 We make the city, and the city
makes us. In a time when the urban environment is crisscrossed, undergirded,
and overlaid with digitality, the corollary is: We make data, and data makes
5
L. Shay, W. Hartzog, J. Nelson, D.
Larkin, and G. Conti. (2016). “Confronting
Automated Law Enforcement,” In Robot
Law, edited by R. Calo, M. Froomkin, and
I. Kerr. Northampton, Mass.: Edward Elgar
6
Harvey, D. (2008). “he Right to
the City.” New Let Review 53 (October):
23-40.
us. We thus have—and must claim hold
of—“the right to command the whole urban process.”
An informational right recognizes the
critical importance of ICT in that urban
process. It is a rallying call for snatching
back power from the political and technical elites who reconigure the city as a
platform for corporate smartness. It is a
banner that says, ‘We will not allow you
to extract data from people and places,
only so you can then use that data to
dispossess us of control over our cities,
ourselves.’
An informational right is more than a
request for transparency and accuracy. It does not seek to ratify systems of
exclusion and enforcement. As if they
would be legitimate if only we could
see their mechanisms and correct our
data-driven proiles. he right is a demand for antagonism, an airmation of
techno-political contestations. It is an
open and ongoing dissent: against the
stabilization of power through technocratic justiications; against the securitized enclosure of the city; against
stratiication by data-driven scores and
autocratic enforcement; and against allowing the city, and thus ourselves, to
be molded by elite interests.
An informational right is a declaration
that the city is for all of us—and we will
not tolerate techno-political arrangements that deny us that right.
11
THE JERUSALEMS ON THE MAP
Valentina Carraro and Bart Wissink
City University of Hong Kong (
[email protected] /
[email protected])
PROLOGUE
MAPS BETWEEN SCIENCE AND POLITICS
In 1993 the Oslo Accords are signed.
Soon thereater, Edward Said critically
characterises the negotiations that resulted in this agreement as an uneven
confrontation between Israelis armed
with ‘unmatched facts, iles and power’
and Palestinians caught between ‘disaffection and unrealistic optimism’. Palestinians need to turn geography into resistance by creating a counter-strategy,
that is, a counter-map: detailed, surveyed
and drawn by Palestinians, connecting
Palestinians into a greater unity, with Jerusalem at its centre.
he irst thing is to grasp as concretely
and as exactly as possible what the facts
on the ground really are, not in order to
be defeated by them, but to invent ways of
countering them with our won facts and
institutions, and inally of asserting our
national presence 1.
he Oslo Accords avoided tackling
whether Jerusalem should belong to Israel or the future Palestinian state. In theory, the city is still under international
control. In practice, however, Israel has
full control and regards it as its ‘undivided capital’. Many maps lend legitimacy to
these claims.
Maps are practical tools for navigating
space. What is the shortest route home?
Where is Latvia, exactly? But they are
not mere factual representations. he
lines delimiting Latvia on a map contribute to make Latvia what it is: a state.
Whether laid out on the desks of army
oicers or hang in classrooms, maps
shape our views of the world, producing
new worlds. hey are always political.
While these two ways of understanding
maps are at odds with one another, to
some extent we embrace both. Ater all,
as Alan MacEachren notes, when taking
a plane even a postmodernist hopes the
pilot will use a map that sticks to the
facts. Nonetheless, Said’s words remind
us that maps lay uncomfortably
between
1. Said, E.W. (1996) ‘Facts, Facts, and More
Facts’. Peace And Its Discontents: Essays on
Palestine in the Middle East Peace Process.
New York: Vintage, p.31.
12
‘science’ and ‘politics’ – disrupting the neat boundary that we
draw between the two.
DIGITAL EMPIRES?
Since the emergence of
modern states in the seventeenth century, maps
have been associated
with state-power. Cartography was a means
to control, and conquer.
With digital technologies,
this seems to be changing.
Mosaic, the irst web-browser, was launched in the same
year of the Oslo Accords. We
have come a long way since those
irst, slow-loading GIFs: map interfaces, map apps, geo-tags, 360° street view
services; our geographies have changed,
and so their digital representations. What
happens, when corporations like Google
replace the state as providers and mediators of geographic information? As the
introduction to this pamphlet asks, how
can we contest Google’s version of the
map, and Google’s version of the world?
COUNTER MAPS
Do participatory, open-source web
projects ofer an alternative?
Talking about maps, the most
signiicant example of such
projects is OpenStreetMap, or
OSM. A Google search (we
know, the irony) informs us
that OSM is “a collaborative
project to create a free editable map of the world”. Two
principles underpin OSM.
First, local people should decide what the map of their
home place looks like. Second, decisions
about what should be mapped, and how,
should be taken collectively. he result
is an online mapping-project, edited
thousands of times a day, by now covering nearly every corner of the planet. Maps and apps based on OSM have
helped bring humanitarian aid to Haiti,
improve infrastructure provision in Kenya’s slums, and encourage bike-use in
Austria. Appealing? Of course. But it is
important to remember that OSM is not a
parallel universe, where ‘real world’ dynamics magically disappear. OSM is part
of the real world. Economic interests, ideas about gender, class and race, levels of
education, geographies, geopolitics, and
infrastructure: not only do they mater,
but they constantly redeine what OSM
is. In other words: open discussions are
13
great, but they do not guarantee everyone a fair chance to speak, nor do they
necessarily result in fair outcomes.
THE JERUSALEMS ON THE MAP
his brings us back to Jerusalem, the focus of our research. As the archetypal
contested city, Jerusalem is a good case
study: an opportunity to look deeper into
our “cartographic alternatives”. he introduction to this pamphlet claims that
Google improperly describes Jerusalem
as the capital of Israel. However, to be
precise, Google is presenting us with
Wikipedia’s entry about Jerusalem. So
it is actually Wikipedia, a collaborative
platform, that is taking a stance about
geopolitics. Granted, Google plays an important role in consolidating of this ‘fact’.
By contrast, the map on right side of the
screen sticks to the UN position, depicting the city as split along the Green Line.
To the right of the line, where a majority
of Israeli lives, the map is very detailed,
pointing us at shops, landmarks, bus
stops, etc. To the let of the line – the Palestinian half –neighbourhoods are empty grey blobs. Depending on the domain
from which the map is accessed, name
tags are displayed in diferent languages. he Arabic (and English) version of
the map, however, mostly transliterates
Hebrew names into Arabic, rather than
adopting the names used by Palestinians.
Now let us minimize that window, and
bring up OSM. In case of contested spaces, OSM encourages the local community to resolve any arising dispute. he
only guideline: if in doubt, what counts
is what is ‘on the ground’. Given that
the OSM community is overwhelmingly Israeli, and that creating ‘facts on the
ground’ is a declared Israeli strategy,
both factors work at the Palestinians’ disadvantage. While Google ofers its map
in diferent languages, OSM presents its
data in a single map-space, where names
are displayed in the ‘local language’.
he ‘domain of Hebrew’ does not stop
at the armistice line, but encompasses
the whole municipal administration
– pushing the Israeli boundary by
several kilometres.
COUNTER-COUNTER MAPS
Google maps and OSM have
both been used by Palestinian groups to create their
own maps. In the case of
Google, this has meant
overlaying the standard
map with new layers, showing, for example, the villages and neighbourhoods destroyed since the Nakba. By
releasing its data for free reuse,
14
on the
other hand,
OSM allows for
greater freedom in
editing and ‘remixing’
the data into entirely new
maps. Perhaps more importantly,
OSM provides discussion forums where
the community’s decisions can be called
into question. his is a crucial diference:
not only does OSM enable groups to
counter-map; it also ofers a space where
these diferent views are exchanged. Examining the debates around Jerusalem,
however, shows something surprising:
OSM users insist on deining this space
as at once democratic and apolitical.
OSM is about data, data are facts, and
facts are the opposite of politics – or so
goes the mantra.
EPILOGUE
Two map-applications and two models
of cartographic production. But none of
the resulting Jerusalems resonates with
how Palestinian Jerusalemites see their
city. Perhaps, a map of Jerusalem satisfying all parties involved cannot exist
at this moment. Israeli and Palestinians
are divided – even among themselves –
about the representation of ‘their’ city:
should it be split and how? Where
are the boundaries? How should it be
called? Digital technologies have made
map-making easier, and multiplying the
number of Jerusalems that we may ind
as cartographic representations. hat
said, not all maps have the same weight,
so this is in itself no guarantee of fairer
political representation. Inequalities extend to digital geographies, and inluence
online maps, whether provided by powerful corporations or built by a community of volunteers. his is not to say that
the diferences between the two models
are not signiicant. On the contrary, to
beter understand what potentials and
risks online maps bring with them we
should look deeper into the details of
maps: the ine prints in the licence agreement, the footnotes, the tags on the map
feature. Maps are always political, even
when rendered from open data.
15
RENT, DATAFICATION, AND THE
AUTOMATED LANDLORD
Desiree Fields
University of Sheield (
[email protected])
“Rent Easy. Earn WaypointsTM for doing things most renters do anyway: Sign
a 2 or 3 year lease. Pay rent on time. Pass tune-ups. Refer friends…Live Well.
Use WaypointsTM to get these items and more for free: Free rent…Home upgrades…Appliances.” (Waypoint Homes, 2015).
WaypointsTM are a “customized loyalty
and rewards solution” designed by INCENTCO, a company drawing on technology, marketing, and industry experts
to develop “incentive platforms” for real
estate, furniture rental, and health care,
among other businesses. For Waypoint
Homes, a rental company controlling
more than 30,000 formerly foreclosed
homes and backed by Starwood Capital
Group and Colony Capital, WaypointsTM ‘gamify’ the subjectivities and behaviors of ‘good tenants’, with renters
earning points for behaviors aligned with
the interests of landlords. hat is, “doing
things most renters do anyway” will also
increase revenue per home, while many
of the rewards tenants can get, such as
appliances, smart home accessories and
other home upgrades, also add value to
the rental properties.
Advances in (big) data generation and
processing, cloud-based platforms, mobile computing, and algorithmic decision
making are being used as technologies of
abstraction and aggregation that allow
for new forms of large-scale investment
in the rental market.
he US housing bust, which resulted in
the repossession of millions of homes
and a surge in demand for rental housing, has converged with the ascendance
of the new tech boom.
Rent payments have thus shited: no
longer the mere fulillment of a contractual obligation between tenant and landlord, rent represents an asset base for the
construction of inancial products. As the
16
Private equity irms like Blackstone, Colony Capital, and others are capitalizing
on the vacant pink stucco homes, overgrown yards, and abandoned, mosquito-infested swimming pools let behind
ater 2008. First, they have rapidly assembled large, geographically dispersed
portfolios of rental homes. Achieving this
scale has then allowed them to securitize
the stream of monthly payments from
tenants, and these rent-backed inancial
instruments have met with strong demand from capital markets.
example of WaypointsTM shows, information-communication technologies and
data practices serve as techniques by
which landlords realize rents.
In this instance, we see an incentive platform being used to encourage tenants to
lock into long-term leases, which oten
come with rent increases, thereby securing the revenue stream to keep payments lowing to bondholders. In turn,
landlords can use up-front payments
from holders of rent-backed securities
to inance expansion, with the new asset
class also generating fees for a range of
intermediaries, such as the credit rating
agencies that rate the instruments and
the traders that market them. Meanwhile, rewards like home upgrades low
back to the landlord in the form of enhanced property value, realized as rent at
the point of resale.
At every stage of the rental process, information infrastructures and practices
of data use, resue, and analysis help automate landlording. Max-bid apps allow geographically-removed investors to make
local markets knowable and target the
most desirable properties. Automating
rent payments and maintenance requests
allows for the management of portfolios of thousands of homes clustered in
the US Sun Belt. Incentive platforms
(like Waypoints) gamify rent extraction.
Eviction can even be outsourced through
sotware-as-a-service--already compatible with leading property management
platforms.
he entrance of institutional investors
into the rental market is driving the development of new applications and techniques for data generation, processing,
and use to inform their investment strategies and manage their portfolios. For example, rental market intelligence (RentRange, CoreLogic), portfolio surveillance
systems (Green River Capital’s Rental
Asset Management and Performance sys-
172
tem), and online marketplaces for rental
investment (Roofstock, Investability) are
now sites of technological innovation
and expansion of the digital economy.
he role that such information infrastructures and data practices are playing in
constituting the single-family rental market as a inancial asset class can be seen as
what information theorists like Mark Lycet, Viktor Mayer-Schonberger, and Kenneth Cukier term “dataication”, or the
use of data to create value. Information
can be abstracted from and about speciic,
socio-spatially fragmented properties and
tenants, and rebundled easily, eiciently,
and afordably. Dataication allows for the
aggregation on which the creation of new
inancial assets depends, and, crucially, is
a self-perpetuating process, leaving new
forms of data capital in its wake. For example, tenant-facing systems that automate rent-collection and maintenance
18
requests provide a constant low of property-level data, information that becomes
data capital in the sense that irms can
feed it back into their max bid algorithms,
analyse rent levels, and search out eiciencies on maintenance costs.
But even as dataication makes legible
previously unknown spaces and populations and informs the production of new
inancial asset classes, this process is often opaque to those directly afected by
it, in this case renters themselves: a situation that forecloses critical relection.
he automation of so many aspects of the
rental and property management process complicates the igure of the landlord: while one irm may have monopoly
control over the property, a whole series
of technological intermediaries is tasked
with sustaining that monopoly control
via systems that collect, process, and circulate information about tenants and the
spaces in which they carry out their daily lives. his raises questions about who
owns that information, how it is governed, how it circulates, and to what ends
it is used—and to whose beneit. Tenants
of the automated landlord are efectively
(and unwitingly) paying two rents: one
consisting of money, the other of information, extracted as they do things like
renew their lease or request a leaky faucet be ixed. Harvesting this data, in turn,
creates new opportunities for capital accumulation. For example, lists of tenants
that occasionally pay rent just a few days
late might be sold to a data broker, and
ultimately used to target ads for credit
cards, payday loans, or “sharing economy” services that allow a middle class
stretched thin to use their homes and cars
to draw in new income streams.
interests of inancial actors by reconnecting homes into lows of global capital. At
the same time, it further entangles tenants with largely unaccountable systems
of information extraction and commodiication. he struggle for a right to the
city is unavoidably about encountering
and questioning these entanglements
collectively. If, as legal scholar Frank Pasquale argues, opacity and obfuscation are
core to the operation of the inancial and
tech industries, then demystifying and
making their operations visible is a political act that can open up opportunities
for critique and struggle about how dataication shapes urban life.
Ultimately, dataication in the sphere of
rental housing is working to advance the
19
DIGITAL LABOURERS OF THE CITY, UNITE!
Kurt Iveson
University of Sydney (
[email protected])
It may seem as though these apps are working for us – improving our
experience of the city. But I think this is to put it the wrong way around – or
at least, to tell only half the story. We are also working for the apps.
For growing numbers of urban inhabitants,
smartphones and their mobile apps have
become essential tools for everyday life.
In the decade since smartphones irst
became popularised, many millions of
people in cities around the world have
grown used to using apps for inding
and making our way around the city, for
hooking up with friends or potential lovers, for sharing things or thoughts or pictures, for playing games, and for many
more things besides.
It may seem as though these apps are
working for us – improving our experience of the city. But I think this is to put
it the wrong way around – or at least, to
tell only half the story. We are also working for the apps.
As use of these apps become part of our
everyday movements around the city, we
are performing a kind of ‘digital labour’
that generates vast amounts of proit for
the corporations that make them. A ‘right
to the city’ for our digitally-networked
places and times will need to include an
analysis of the exploitation of our digital
labour, and a strategy to democratize the
surplus that it generates.
20
URBAN LIFE AND DIGITAL LABOUR
he idea that as we use mobile apps we
are performing a kind of ‘digital labour’
at irst seems counter-intuitive. When we
use these apps, aren’t we just consumers
of a product that someone else has made?
Of course, that’s part of what’s going on
here. But if we think about the business
model of the people who own the apps,
the idea that we are not just consumers
but also ‘digital labourers’ starts to make
more sense.
Many of the apps on which urban inhabitants come to depend are ‘free’. But app
owners are not giving us their apps out
of the goodness of their hearts. he reason that their makers can give them away
for litle or no cost is because they (hope
they) can make money in other ways. So,
how do they make money?
Of course, puting up with some advertising is one of the ‘costs’ of using some of
these apps, which depend upon advertising revenue to make some money.
But the apps that we use as we move
around the city are also frequently designed to gather data about our movements. hat data about our paterns of
activity in the city – oten referred to as a
form of ‘locational’ or ‘geospatial’ data –
is a goldmine for app owners. It is sold on
to third parties, who analyse that data for
a variety of purposes – ranging from the
provision of further commercial services
to targeted advertising and security.
It’s notoriously diicult to get clear information about these data markets and
their value. But we can get some sense of
how valuable geospatial data has become
by looking at the way that markets value
the apps that collect it. For instance, the
real-time navigation app Waze, which
works by collecting and then sharing
data about its users movements across
the road network, sold to Google in 2013
for a reported igure of about US$1.3 bil-
lion. hat massive price is for an app that
is ‘free’ to download and use. hose who
use it to navigate the city have also been
working for its owners, producing the
data that allowed them to sell it at such
a high price.
Waze is one of many popular mobile apps
that work by enlisting us in the conscious
or unconscious production of data. As we
use these apps, our everyday lives outside the ‘workplace’ come to involve a
form of labour. Such labour plays a crucial role in generating the vast market
value of such apps. As digital media analyst Trebor Sholz puts it, “without being
recognized as labor, our location, input,
and tracked mobility become assets that
can be turned into economic value.”
21
TAKING ACTION ON DIGITAL LABOUR
If our everyday use of smart phones and
their apps has become a form of digital
labour, what should we do about it?
Much of the debate about our rights in
the informational city has been conducted in reference to our rights as consumers. his approach tends to emphasise
important issues like privacy protection
and the terms of service associated with
speciic apps.
A digital labour perspective adds something to these discussions about our
rights as consumers. It draws our atention to other issues that are crucial to the
politics and political-economy of the informational city, related to our rights as
producers.
As geographer David Harvey puts it, the
ight for our right to the city must be a
ight for “greater democratic control over
the production and utilization of the surplus.” If our everyday use of mobile apps
produces data that is the source of massive surplus, then we have to ind ways
to democratise this surplus to make our
cities more equitable and just.
he rights of labourers to shape the conditions of their labour and to socialise the
products of their work have never been
established without a struggle. And while
this is a struggle for our times, perhaps
there are lessons from our past to guide us.
We will need to develop new ways to
assert our collective rights as labourers
(alongside our individual rights as consumers). We are witnessing the birth of
forms of organising on these issues. If
22
unions ofer us one historical model of
how labourers have worked together to
enact and protect their rights, how might
we efectively adapt this model to our
current situation? A few years ago, an attempt to establish a Facebook Users Union generated some media coverage, but
did not catch on. What new strategies
might we experiment with to collectivise
as digital labourers?
We will also need to ind more efective
ways to collectivise and redistribute the
proits that are made from our labour.
Labour movements in the past have
deployed good old-fashioned taxation
for this purpose. Making new demands
around taxation will be a challenge, but
one worth pursuing given that so many
of the nimble global digital corporates
proiting from our labour are not paying
their fair share.
“Should we feed all the data for a
given problem to a computer? Why
not? Because the machine only
uses data based on questions that
can be answered with a yes or a
no. And the computer itself only
responds with a yes or a no. Moreover, can anyone
claim that all the data have been assembled? Who
is going to legitimate this use of totality? Who is
going to demonstrate that the “language of the
city”, to the extent that it is a language, coincides
with ALGOL, Syntol, or FORTRAN, the languages
of machines, and that this translation is not a
betrayal? Doesn't the machine risk becoming an
instrument in the hands of pressure groups and
politicians? Isn't it already a weapon for those in
power and those who serve them?”
Henri Lefebvre (The Urban Revolution, 1970)
23
RE-POLITICIZING DATA
Taylor Shelton
University of Kentucky (
[email protected])
Limiting access to property data is both an atack on citizens’ right to
information and an atack on their right to the city as a whole.
he dominant discourse around data today is one that tends strongly towards
the post-political. hat is, data is seen
by everyone from government bureaucrats to Silicon Valley techno-utopians
as a primary means by which political
contention and disagreement is replaced
with a drive towards consensus, and the
erasure of claims that do not it into such
a consensus. Inluenced by neoclassical
economics’ preoccupation with the need
for perfect information, contemporary
understandings of data have led to social problems being recast as information
problems. he many ills facing society,
and especially cities, are seen to stem
from a lack of good data, which has in
turn led to irrational, ineicient and suboptimal policies and decisions.
But through the increasing availability
of new sources of data – whether taken from social media feeds, smartphone
traces, or sensors atached to buildings,
roads and water pipes – municipal governments can allegedly overcome these
issues, identifying the optimal way of approaching any given problem. As the adage goes, people may be entitled to their
own opinions, but they aren’t entitled to
their own facts.
Of course, the facts embodied in data
24
are anything but universal. he acts of
producing, analyzing and interpreting
data can give rise to wildly diferent understandings of the world and any given
phenomena within it. Decisions about
what data to collect, how to collect it,
how to code it, store it, analyze and interpret it, are fundamentally subjective,
particular to the given individual or institution involved. Even though people
might not be entitled to their own facts,
this is no guarantee that the use of data
will produce a single, universal answer to
any given question or problem.
Nonetheless, any acknowledgment that
data isn’t always an appropriate solution to any given problem is largely absent from ‘smart cities’ initiatives being
adopted around the world. Instead, urban
governance is increasingly oriented towards the philosophy of “what gets measured, gets managed”, inding new ways to
quantify and data-fy any range of social
processes. hese methods are deployed
by ostensibly non-ideological municipal
regimes (e.g., Michael Bloomberg’s New
York City or Martin O’Malley’s Baltimore) that are simply interested in good
governance. heir view of data as always
apolitical and objective provides cover
for what are always intensely political
and normative decisions. From privatization and cost-cuting, to union-busting
and the punitive policing of marginalized
communities, these data-driven policies
tend to be stereotypically neoliberal.
And while these uses of data for nefarious
ends help to expose the inherent politicization of such technology, many critics
have failed to grasp what the geographer
Elvin Wyly calls the historically contingent linkages between methodology,
epistemology and politics. hat is, even
though data of all kinds is being used
for politically reactionary means under
the guise of objectivity, data itself isn’t
necessarily tied to these politics. Data is,
has been, and can continue to be used for
more liberatory purposes.
Data can not only help us to uncover previously unforeseen manifestations of unjust social practices so as to contest them,
but can also be used to explicitly push
back against problematic representations
and understandings of urban problems
such as gentriication and neighborhood
change. Similarly, public policies can be
contested not only through conventional
political claims about who wins and who
loses, but also based on the very data being used to arrive at such policy recommendations. As Greg Fischer, the mayor
of Louisville, Kentucky, once opined,
“Great cities embrace the data. hey are
not defensive about it… they improve”.
But if governments are to truly ‘take data
seriously’ without geting defensive, they
must take all data seriously, even if it advances an oppositional viewpoint, thus
providing a point of leverage for those
seeking to claim a right to the city.
Yet the ability to use data in order to create alternative representations of the city
remains limited. One the one hand, the
necessary skills to collect, analyze and
interpret data are unevenly distributed.
On the other, even for those with the
requisite skills, the necessary data oten
remains inaccessible. Some cities around
the United States have adopted open data
ordinances and cumulatively opened up
thousands of datasets for the purposes
of promoting transparency. Yet, in an
era of austerity and shrinking budgets,
many municipalities are unable to devote the resources to maintaining open
data repositories, making this rollout of
openness uneven both topically and geographically.
his is especially true of data about one
crucial facet of urban life: property. For a
variety of reasons, the ability for citizens
in American cities to access information
about property ownership remains incredibly limited as compared with their
access to data on restaurant inspections or any number of other municipal
functions. While dashboards, maps and
25
analog reports provide some access to
basic information about property transactions, access to the underlying raw
data remains restricted. For instance, a
citizen atempting to understand speculative activity on the part of developers
in a gentrifying neighborhood might be
confronted in many cases not with the
names of individuals or business entities
with which they’re familiar, but a bevy of
diferent pseudonymous limited liability
companies (LLCs): a type of incorporated
business that allows proprietors to diferentiate their personal assets from those
of the company. Were a property-owning
LLC to be sued by the municipality or by
a tenant, the proprietor’s personal assets
would be unavailable as a potential remedy. In efect, LLCs are used to distribute
liability and, at least in practice if not intent, hide the traces of predatory activity
from the public. Many properties may be
owned by the same individual, but with
multiple LLCs each only owning a single property, making it diicult to discern any broader patern of speculative
buying. Even in those instances where
someone does happen to do business under their own name, many property assessment oices require a paid account to
search records by the name of the owner,
rather than by a single address at a time,
making it diicult to understand (and
quantify) the exact scope of the problem.
In most cases, the underlying data can
not only answer pressing questions about
who owns property, but also about where
this property is owned. his additional
data-point can help to upend conventional narratives about the twin processes of
neighborhood decline and gentriication
being natural processes inherent to the
26
places they take root in, and instead show
them to be the result of speculative activity by outsiders – whether from wealthy
enclaves elsewhere in a city, or even a
diferent city altogether. Tying many
pseudonymous LLCs back to the same
owner address is a key way of identifying this kind of secretive and predatory
activity. Being able to combine this ownership data and synthesize it with other
data can reveal that many vacant and
abandoned properties in cities might not
only be owned by people who
live quite far from the
properties that
Absentee & non-local property ownership.
Map shows all properties in Lexington, Kentucky with
registered owner addresses outside of the city. Of Lexington’s 109,929 properties, 10% are owned outside of
the city, representing 18% of the city’s total land area.
they’ve let fall into disrepair, but also
that these individuals and companies
own dozens of other properties. In other words, this data can point towards
the fundamental connection between
processes of absenteeism, gentriication
and neighborhood decline, as well as
the mutual interdependence of rich and
poor neighborhoods. Instead of seeing
these places as separate and apart from
one another, such maps can reveal that
property ownership is one of the key
means through which distinctions of rich
and poor are produced in the irst place.
Data can help to produce understandings of urban problems that don’t further
stigmatize already marginalized neighborhoods, but instead situate them and
their problems within a broader historical, geographical and political-economic
context.
Intentionally or otherwise, limiting access to property (or any other kind of)
data prevents any large-scale analysis
of these processes by citizens, further
disempowering them by curtailing their
ability to couch their claims in the necessary language of data. Keeping such
data closed isn’t simply a problem because public data is paid for by citizens,
or because governments should strive
to be as transparent as possible. Instead,
we should see limiting access to data as
representing both an atack on citizens’
right to information and an atack on
their right to the city as a whole. In order
to atain the right to both participation
in, and appropriation of, the city, citizens
must be free to understand the city and
construct their own knowledges and representations of it; this process of knowledge production is fundamental to their
ability to in turn produce an alternative,
more just and liberatory future for the
city itself.
27
THE #DIGITALLIBERTIES CROSS-PARTY
CAMPAIGN
Sophia Drakopoulou
Middlesex University (
[email protected])
he cross-party Digital Liberties campaign (#DigitalLiberties) seeks to establish a constitutional right to digital liberties in Britain.
It plans to do this either through a People’s Charter of Digital Liberties or
through a British Constitution that incorporates the rights of digital citizens.
With a view to introducing a People’s
Charter of Digital Liberties in Parliament,
we are crowd-sourcing public opinion on
the topic. he internet is not just a commercial space; it is a community space,
a learning space, and a creative space.
herefore, access to the internet should
be considered as vital as access to power
and water. More should be invested in infrastructure to connect remote places in
the UK so that both the young and the
elderly can beneit from online access.
Our actions online should not be governed by fear of surveillance. he rights
of everyone, including children, should
be protected online. People should own
the data they create, or at least be able
to gain tangible returns for the data they
give away for free to companies. Irrespective of age, everyone should have the
right to digital education. When I walk
down a physical street I know I have certain rights as a citizen that are protected
28
by law. he same is not true for the often-invisible, digital traces I leave behind
as I walk. My phone emits its global position as it searches for Wi-Fi connections.
To get to my current location, I have used
my Oyster card, which tracks my transport routes around the city. My phone is
logged into a social network that records
my location on its system. hese personal digital traces do not belong to me; in
many cases, they can be used and sold
by the companies that recorded them. If
I use a public Wi-Fi connection, the company providing the Wi-Fi may keep my
browsing history and some personal details from the device I’m using. For the
sake of convenience, we trust - or assume
- that we will be protected. Oten, we are
wrong. No law fully protects our human
rights online. And that’s where the problem lies. Privacy, the right to education,
and freedom of speech are fundamental
human rights and should apply as much
online as well as oline. Around the
world, there have been several atempts
to address online citizenship. Brazil and
Italy have introduced Bills of Rights for
the Digital Citizen.
he EU has introduced directives and
modiied laws to protect the rights of
citizens online. While these are well-intended, such as the “Cookie Directive”,
they are oten poorly informed, full of
dangerous loopholes, and obsolete by
the time they are passed. Patches of laws
and directives have atempted to address
some aspects of our lives and actions
online. But, the rights of citizens online
have not been addressed in their entirety,
and vital regulatory underpinnings that
determine how technology can be built
and deployed, such as network neutrality,
data protection, and copyright are among
the most-lobbied areas of legislation. he
UK’s referendum vote to leave the EU
garding digital citizenship.
In the meantime, the internet and related
technologies continue to evolve quickly,
and large businesses will also see an opportunity to pursue their own agendas.
he internet belongs to everyone. We
should actively participate in the making
of a new bill of rights that addresses our
rights as citizens online. he time to act is
now! If you agree with all or at least one
of the assertions above, please visit our
website
(htp://digitalliberties.org.uk),
learn more about digital citizenship, use
opens a vast number of complex questions that will take many years to decide.
Unknowns include whether Britain will
remain within the Council of Europe and
under the jurisdiction of the European
Court of Human Rights (both of which
are separate bodies from the EU), or create a new British constitution incorporating a new Human Rights Act. No mater
how these events play out, the situation
presents a great opportunity to address
afresh all the grey areas of the law re-
our hashtag (#DigitalLiberties), and tell
us what you think! From January 2017 we
will conduct a series of events all around
Britain to collect people’s opinions about
digital citizenship and we will present
these to Parliament for debate. Depending on the course of action Britain takes,
we will campaign either to introduce a
People’s Charter of Digital Liberties or to
incorporate digital citizenship rights into
a new British Constitution.
29
THE CITY IS OURS (IF WE DECIDE IT IS)
Mark Purcell
University of Washington (
[email protected])
hese days, a “right to the city” is oten
invoked among activists and reformers
who hope to make the city a beter place.
But the term is usually understood in a
liberal way, as a demand to add a right to
the city to the list of individual rights that
are already guaranteed by the State. But
the right to the city as it was conceived in
France in the 1960s, and in particular in
the work of Henri Lefebvre, is a far more
radical idea, one I think we should be attentive to and work to recover.
Lefebvre understood the right to the city,
and the right to information as well, as
part of a wider political project. hat project was for people to rise up, become
active, and decide to take control of their
afairs in all spheres of life. his was
called at the time in France autogestion
généralisée.1 he base term, autogestion,
meant industrial workers taking control
of their factory and managing it themselves, without owners and professional
managers. he idea was not for workers
to demand reforms, like a higher salary,
or more rights on the job. he idea was
to begin enacting a revolution. In autogestion workers directly appropriate
the means of production and render owners and managers obsolete. Autogestion
généralisée, for its part, was an atempt to
spread autogestion beyond the working
1. In English: generalized self-management.
30
class and the factory, to all areas of life.
In autogestion généralisée, people govern
themselves instead of being governed by
a State. Students and teachers govern the
school instead of being governed by specialized administrators, and so on. It was
in this context of autogestion généralisée
that Lefebvre and his generation understood the right to the city. It was a declaration made by urban inhabitants that
they intended to begin directly appropriating and managing the production and
management of the city, instead of giving
that work over to specialized experts in
State agencies, public utilities, development corporations, and the like.
It is important to understand that autogestion généralisée was not conceived of
as a utopia. he idea was not that people
would take control of all spheres of their
life, tomorrow, and manage them perfectly. Instead, autogestion was seen as an
ongoing project whereby we declare our
intention to become active and manage
our afairs for ourselves, and then we set
about doing so continually, resolutely, on
into the future. he right to the city is
precisely the same: a perpetual project by
urban inhabitants to produce and manage
urban space themselves.
If we turn our atention to the right to
information in this context, we might be
tempted to see it as a right inhabitants
have to access the information they need
The right to
information signiies
a declaration that
we will no longer let our
information be produced and
managed for us, that we will
produce and manage our
information ourselves
to make good decisions about the city. In
that scenario, it would be a question of inhabitants struggling to gain access to existing information that is being withheld
from them, by a power outside of or above
them. his line of thinking would produce
eforts like those of Edward Snowden or
WikiLeaks. However, while such access to
information is certainly important, I want
to propose a deeper meaning to the right
to information. In this deeper meaning,
the right to information signiies a declaration that we will no longer let our information be produced and managed for
us, that we will produce and manage our
information ourselves.
here are countless examples of how we
might pursue such a project, but let me
sketch just a few. In its census and other data, the Indian government oten
underappreciates or ignores the people,
activities, and human value that exists
in informal setlements in Indian cities.
On this basis, such setlements are oten
refused services, or are cleared to make
way for other land uses. One response
by inhabitants of informal setlements
has been to carry out their own counts,
surveys, and maps, so that they develop
fuller information about their setlement.
Not only does this work typically produce
more accurate information, which is useful in geting needed services or fending
of clearance and removal, but the act of
producing information together is also an
important means for mobilizing and activating the community. hrough this activation, residents build skills, solidarity,
and a sense of themselves as more capable
political agents. Clearly in any such urban
struggle it is important to have access to
good information, but it is perhaps still
32
more important for inhabitants to take
control of the production, management,
and use of that information.
A similar dynamic is discernible in the
work of Los Angeles Community Action
Network (LACAN). Before the new efort
to put body cameras on all police oicers,
there was a real lack of hard evidence
available to those who wanted to make
a claim of police brutality, harassment,
or racism. So, starting in 2005, LACAN
developed a community watch program
through which residents document police
actions in the community, usually using
video equipment, so that evidence of civil
rights violations is available to those who
want to ile complaints.2 As in India, the
new body of information is itself an important beneit, but even more important
is the activation, organization, and conidence among residents that results from
having produced the information themselves.
In both cases, then, it is important to focus
not only on the informational product but
also the act of producing information. Urban inhabitants are not so much demanding access to some body of information
that is being withheld from them, nor are
they really wanting a certain body information to be produced for them. Rather,
they are geting on with the job of producing, for themselves, the kind of information that they see as relevant to their
project of creating the city they want.
I think we should understand both the
2. his year a similar efort ilmed the police shooting of Alton Sterling in Baton
Rouge, LA.
right to the city and the right to information radically, in the context of autogestion généralisée, as two aspects of a perpetual project through which we take up
the challenge of managing our cities, our
information, and our afairs ourselves.
his may seem a daunting task, one we
might think we can never accomplish.
But, again, autogestion généralisée is not a
utopia; it is a perpetual project. We should
not expect to inish it. he only thing we
can do is begin it and continually renew
our commitment to it. If we do that, I
think we will discover what most of those
who take up this project discover: that we
are, together, beter than we thought at
managing our afairs for ourselves. And,
what is more, we will discover that there
is a great and nurturing joy in the project
of autogestion généralisée. Not a cheap
joy that comes and goes quickly, but an
enduring joy, one that setles deep inside
us and makes us stronger. A joy that nurtures us, a joy that increases our power
and desire to act together. We are entirely capable of acting for ourselves to create
the kind of city we want. And, if we decide to do so, I suspect we won’t regret it.
So let’s get to work.
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We are a group of researchers who are
studying the many ways that digital
technologies are rapidly changing our
cities. Whilst many of these changes are
sometimes exciting and unprecedented,
not everyone stands to gain from them.
Many people will be let behind by these
transformations; many will never have
a say in the types of places and societies
being brought into being; and many
will never actively enjoy the beneits of
technologies created by others. In other words, a large number of people will
be disempowered by these changes. The
digital city will not be for them.
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We've produced this pamphlet as an
introduction to some of these concerns.
We invite you to respond with questions
and comments, and we hope that you
can also continue this discussion.
PUBLISHED BY MEATSPACE PRESS
MEATSPACEPRESS.ORG
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