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Hi, this is where I (Tricia Wang) track my field notes and thoughts on the socio-cultural contexts of technology usage in low-income communities. More about Cultural Bytes.

I am currently conducting ethnographic work with urban migrants in China and a rural migrant sending village in Mexico. Read more about my research. Let's Talk!

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Other Sites:
::YouMeiTI - I blog about Chinese Youth, Media and Information Technology
::Digital Urbanisms - blog about people + mapping + cities + technology
::Hi Tricia - my personal blog
::Tricia is Reading This! - interesting links from my online reading list
::Dichos y Vida - quotes make me happy

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Most Popular Posts:

My Suggestions for Making Google’s Services More Relevant for Non-Elite Chinese Users (involves some ethnography!)
Interrogating the "Developing" vs "Developed" Country dichotomy: Assumptions, technologies, and Americanism - VOTE FOR OPTION B!
In Wuhan, China, setting up fieldwork site
Cloud Computing for Researchers - Mendeley Your Life!
Doggy Cellphones, Culturally Relevant Technologies, and Doggies in China: Dog Bark Sensing Collars and Sensors
Interpretive Magic!: Ethnoconsumerism with Prof. Alladi Venkatesh
Is the cellphone a mundane non "technology" among the elite?: From Huffington Post to Rupaul's Drag Race
Cultural Fractals: The Recursiveness of Practice
Livescribe Pulse SmartPen: An Ethnographer's dream tool?
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Most Recent Posts:
Internet cafes in China: The Closest Thing to a Playground for Migrant Children
New Product: Microsoft Mischief, an interactive student/teacher teaching tool for the classroom
Leaving for 3rd ethnographic fieldwork trip to Mexico in a migrant-sending Oaxacan village.
Corporate Responsibility in the Age of Algorithms: HP overlooks "Dark Skin" users for its new HP Cam
great quote about ethnography
Map-hole: Technologies of the Mundan and Inscriptions of Power
I'm starting to think about how to visualize my data
flash ethnography: observations of a doctor's use of mobile tech with a patient
Erving Goffman, Cellphones, Social Cohesion
Livescribe Pulse SmartPen: An Ethnographer's dream tool?
Village Technologies: Remote Fertilizer Monitoring

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My profile on Mendeley

Corporate Responsibility in the Age of Algorithms: HP overlooks “Dark Skin” users for its new HP Cam

Type in HP + Cam + Racism in Google Search and you will see 1,000 posts on this topic in the past 24 hours and 13,000 in the past week.

What I am most amazed by is the language that HP used in their online acknowledgment of the Youtube video:

“Everything we do is focused on ensuring that we provide a high-quality experience for all our customers, who are ethnically diverse and live and work around the world…

…. The technology we use is built on standard algorithms that measure the difference in intensity of contrast between the eyes and the upper cheek and nose. We believe that the camera might have difficulty “seeing” contrast in conditions where there is insufficient foreground lighting.”

Notice that HP never actually claims responsibility in overlooking users with darker skin color. They blame the HP Cam’s inability to track black people on the camera’s algorithm. Essentially, they blame the algorithm and the camera. HP never says that their programmers didn’t program the algorithm to process conditions with less contrast. They didn’t blame themselves for not doing careful ethnography on its diversity of users. They didn’t blame managers for not even considering non-light skin users during the entire design process!

Does this signal a new era of corporate responsibility? In the Industrial age, if a worker’s arm was cut off, the blame was placed on the machines. In the Digital Age, is the blame placed on 1’s and 0’s—those ignorant algorithms?

In both eras, the blame is placed on the inorganic objects - the technology. The managers, the programmers, the designers and the company are put in the clear.

In HP’s case, I suspect that their focus groups (if they held any), did not reflect the diversity of their customer base. I suspect that the programmers are light-skinned and do not have many friends with darker skin colors. This is a great example of how a technology’s design fails to be relevant for populations that have been historically ignored by tech companies. While in this youtube video Desi claims that “Hp Computers are Racist” with irony, underlying his statement is a history of companies ignoring black users, even them they prove to be a profitable customer base.

I hope this teach’s HP a valuable lesson, that non-light skin users, are not just end-clients. During the entire design process, the diversity of its user base should inform the way its technology is designed, programmed, tested, and launched.


Social Ruptures = opportunity for cultural shifts: Video on what the 21st Century could look like

I just discovered the ideas of Michael Cartier - he’s kinda like Gilles Deleuze + Manuel De Landa - but more concrete and understandable. At least that’s how his translator, Jon Husband of  Wirearchy Site, makes him sound. What I am fascinated about is how Michael speaks of ruptures as opportunities for cultural shifts. 

Cartier proposes 4 different scenarios for the 21st Century: consumerist, (renewed) participative democracy, environmentally conscious, and oligarchic soft fascism (security state). Here’s more graphs that explains these scenarios. These are great starting points for discussing where one sees their company, themselves, and their community. 

Here are screenshots of the 4 scenarios from the video. 

In speaking about their methods, they say that they are attempting to

“reconstitute the logic of a system in which we will live, shaping it into a portfolio of trends. It analyzes our society using a model which integrates at the same time technological, economic and societal developments, based on a range of readings which support an analysis of the flow of trends according to three vectors in time” Read more about the 

I love it!

The video focuses on the information mediating tools that have spanned our history, leading up to what they call, Internet 2.look to the figure below (pulled from their wesbite, not the video):

A comment on the abundancy of information: The video shows two screen shots where the narrator says that a digital society is not based on the economics of scarcity, but rather an economics of abundance.

  

While the reality of this may be true - because digital products inherently have unlimited iterations without quality degradation which radically changes the industrial model of the fixed production line and stable categories of consumer and producer- I contend that this is not a reality that that media and corporate information industries live in.  Scenario #1 addresses this reality.

I would love to engage in a more explicit and nuanced discussion about the role of information. It seems to me that Cartier and Husband’s video  renders information as a inherently valuable resource - one where information is now abundant - being created by me, you, and you, and all of us! woohoo!! But Dan Schiller has argued that if we want to apply a political economy approach to information, we have to treat it as a commodity instead of a resource.

“The only way we can analyze the political economy of information is to treat information as a tangible commodity, not as a resource.  A resource is something that inherently has value.  Information itself is not inherently valuable.  It is the social reorganization around information that makes it valuable.” pg 9. Schiller, Dan. How to Think About Information. 2006.

Schiller’s theoretical angle on information as a commodity (a focus on the exchange value as opposed to the use value), allows us to see how industries that are invested in controlling digital artifacts react to the new economics of abundance in a  digital society. It is precisely because there is a new social and cultural organization around information as an abundant resource, that marketers are now selling scarcity. They actually HAVE to market the idea that there is a finite limit of their digital product.

As a result, marketers now are engaged in selling authenticity, which is the central argument of Gilmore et. al’s book, Authenticity: What Consumer Really Want. Because there are sooooo many copies of products now, buyers are trying to figure out where is the “real” product. So this could range from me searching for the “real” version of Lady Gaga’s Telephone or some mashed-up version, or me searching for the a “real” Slap Chop to some wannabe slap chopper. 

Are you ready for the 21st century from Benoit Massé on Vimeo.

Reading and wathching all this just makes me want to SCREAM  - I’m flushed with excitement! I love these kind of videos that capture 1000 years of history in 3 min. There’s something  so satisfying about watching such high quality generalizations and overviews. I think in academia we get so much into the specifics of things and we’re penalized for making general statement in fear of being being an essentialist - it’s the tricky boundaries of academia that require one to back up whatever they say. I am a fan of Jon Husband’s and Michael Cartier’s generalizations! Oh and I am a fan of the designer, Benoit Masse.

Check out ConstellationsW &  Jon Husband’s Wirearchy Site. I need to spend a day just dissecting all the intellectual goodies on both of these sites. Hey Jon, you’re a great translator! If every French thinker has you as their translator, then maybe they would be more understandable! Deleuze needed you!

And here’s the best part about what I found on ConstellationsW -  Husband and Cartier provide a list of writers who have inspired their writing with annotations! You guys ROCK!

Thanks to Linda Stone for tweeting about this beautiful video!