Big data
Understood as the basic resource of communicative capitalism, big data has the characteristic of being self-renewing. It is inexhaustible and co-extensive with the reproduction of social life. It reaches through and beyond work, even beyond the reproduction of workers, into the social substance itself.
UPS installed sensors as well as GPS in its trucks in an effort to increase efficiency and control costs. Data on more than 200 elements is collected, including truck speed, number of times the truck is put in reverse, driver seat belt use, the length of time a truck is idling.
Many such enterprises “track the time employees arrive, what they do at work, when they leave for breaks, the times they call in sick, schedule details, personal information and much more”, writes the author, Bill Barlow. Workforce analytics lets a company use this information “to optimize its labor force by scheduling the right mix of full-time, part-time and temporary labor on a variety of schedules”.
Approached in terms of [[class struggle]], big data looks like further escalation of capital’s war against labor.
If earlier waves of automation displaced industrial workers, big data portends the displacement of post-industrial or knowledge workers
The value in and of big data is for capital, not for the people from whom it is expropriated.
- public document at doc.anagora.org/big-data
- video call at meet.jit.si/big-data
communicative capitalism
socialist calculation debate
undoing optimization civic action in smart cities
wide data
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