Calling for a Revolution: An Analysis of IoT Manifestos
Research output: Conference Article in Proceeding or Book/Report chapter › Article in proceedings › Research › peer-review
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Calling for a Revolution : An Analysis of IoT Manifestos. / Fritsch, Ester; Shklovski, Irina; Douglas-Jones, Rachel.
Proceedings of the 2018 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems . Association for Computing Machinery, 2018. Paper 302.Research output: Conference Article in Proceeding or Book/Report chapter › Article in proceedings › Research › peer-review
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TY - GEN
T1 - Calling for a Revolution
T2 - An Analysis of IoT Manifestos
AU - Fritsch, Ester
AU - Shklovski, Irina
AU - Douglas-Jones, Rachel
PY - 2018
Y1 - 2018
N2 - Designers and developers are increasingly writing manifestos to express frustration and uncertainty as they struggle to negotiate between the possibilities that IoT technologies offer and the ethical concerns they engender. Manifestos are defining of a “moment of crisis” and their recent proliferation indicates a desire for change. We analyze the messages manifesto authors have for their readers. Emerging from a sense of uncertainty, these manifestos create publics for debate, demand attention and call for change. While manifestos provide potential roadmaps for a better future, they also express a deep concern and even fear of the state of the world and the role of technology in it. We highlight how practitioners are responding to unstable and rapidly changing times and detail what solutions they envision, and what conflicts these might bring about. Our analysis suggests new ways HCI might theorize and design for responsibility while attending to the perils of responsibilisation.
AB - Designers and developers are increasingly writing manifestos to express frustration and uncertainty as they struggle to negotiate between the possibilities that IoT technologies offer and the ethical concerns they engender. Manifestos are defining of a “moment of crisis” and their recent proliferation indicates a desire for change. We analyze the messages manifesto authors have for their readers. Emerging from a sense of uncertainty, these manifestos create publics for debate, demand attention and call for change. While manifestos provide potential roadmaps for a better future, they also express a deep concern and even fear of the state of the world and the role of technology in it. We highlight how practitioners are responding to unstable and rapidly changing times and detail what solutions they envision, and what conflicts these might bring about. Our analysis suggests new ways HCI might theorize and design for responsibility while attending to the perils of responsibilisation.
U2 - 10.1145/3173574.3173876
DO - 10.1145/3173574.3173876
M3 - Article in proceedings
BT - Proceedings of the 2018 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
PB - Association for Computing Machinery
ER -
ID: 83182062