TY - GEN
T1 - Divesting from Big Tech
T2 - 26th ACM Conference on Computer-Supported Cooperative Work and Social Computing, CSCW 2023
AU - Vertesi, Janet
AU - Matias, J. Nathan
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 Owner/Author.
PY - 2023/10/14
Y1 - 2023/10/14
N2 - The CSCW community's research has traditionally supported by large technology companies such as Google, Meta, or Microsoft. This is not only limited to financial support: our sites of research and our design initiatives have also traditionally included these large corporations, their platforms, and their services. This panel brings together people working on questions of social computing and distributed collaboration outside of Big Tech companies-whether by fostering community work and activism, crafting legistlation, seeking alternative funding streams, leading unionization or federated ventures, or promoting alternative ways of interacting digitally. Panelists will consider how CSCW research can and should consider alternative sources of support and sites of influence, how imbrication with specific technologies developed by Google, Meta or Twitter has shaped our findings about "social"technologies, issues in system design and maintenance outside of the Big Tech ecosystem, how to engage with regulatory stakeholders to enact change, and how to work productively outside of platform capitalism. With increasing public concern over the power of large technology companies and public gaffes with respect to once-trusted corporate infrastructures, the panelists show what we gain and lose analytically, practically, and in terms of sociotechnical futuring when CSCW practitioners look beyond the Big Tech ecosystem.
AB - The CSCW community's research has traditionally supported by large technology companies such as Google, Meta, or Microsoft. This is not only limited to financial support: our sites of research and our design initiatives have also traditionally included these large corporations, their platforms, and their services. This panel brings together people working on questions of social computing and distributed collaboration outside of Big Tech companies-whether by fostering community work and activism, crafting legistlation, seeking alternative funding streams, leading unionization or federated ventures, or promoting alternative ways of interacting digitally. Panelists will consider how CSCW research can and should consider alternative sources of support and sites of influence, how imbrication with specific technologies developed by Google, Meta or Twitter has shaped our findings about "social"technologies, issues in system design and maintenance outside of the Big Tech ecosystem, how to engage with regulatory stakeholders to enact change, and how to work productively outside of platform capitalism. With increasing public concern over the power of large technology companies and public gaffes with respect to once-trusted corporate infrastructures, the panelists show what we gain and lose analytically, practically, and in terms of sociotechnical futuring when CSCW practitioners look beyond the Big Tech ecosystem.
KW - Big Tech
KW - alternative technologies
KW - divestment
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85176241308&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=85176241308&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1145/3584931.3608436
DO - 10.1145/3584931.3608436
M3 - Conference contribution
AN - SCOPUS:85176241308
T3 - Proceedings of the ACM Conference on Computer Supported Cooperative Work, CSCW
SP - 401
EP - 404
BT - CSCW 2023 Companion - Conference Companion Publication of the 2023 Computer Supported Cooperative Work and Social Computing
A2 - Ames, Morgan
A2 - Fussell, Susan
A2 - Gilbert, Eric
A2 - Liao, Vera
A2 - Ma, Xiaojuan
A2 - Page, Xinru
A2 - Rouncefield, Mark
A2 - Singh, Vivek
A2 - Wisniewski, Pamela
PB - Association for Computing Machinery
Y2 - 14 October 2023 through 18 October 2023
ER -