ISIS Claimed the Moscow Concert Hall Attack. Russian Officials Blame Others.
Posted in: UncategorizedRussian narratives served to deflect attention from the failure to prevent the deadly attack while rallying the country behind the war in Ukraine.
Russian narratives served to deflect attention from the failure to prevent the deadly attack while rallying the country behind the war in Ukraine.
A string of top stars denounced the hiring of Ms. McDaniel, the former chairwoman of the Republican National Committee, on their own airwaves.
The media company G/O Media told staffers that it has sold two more of its editorial titles, The AV Club and The Takeout, according to an internal memo obtained by ADWEEK. The news was first reported by the New York Post. It sold film and television publisher The A.V. Club to Paste Magazine, which also…
When it comes to the future of gaming, accessibility and representation are key. Since the 1980s, gaming has been marketed as a male-dominated industry. But that’s not the case. “I’ve been playing video games since I was 4 years old,” said Jaye “Letta J” Watts, founder and CEO of Coexist Gaming. “Men have often shunted…
On Fox News and elsewhere, the commentators have expressed incredulity over the reaction to the hiring of Ronna McDaniel, the former chair of the Republican National Committee.
The North Face brilliantly merges outdoor practicality with urban appeal, highlighting how retail brands can influence societal trends. Through CMO Sophie Bambuck’s perspective, we explore the journey of The North Face in adapting to these cultural shifts, embodying the spirit of adventure while meeting the evolving demands of consumers. Gain a deeper understanding of retail’s…
Accessories are a great way to enhance and complete an outfit. Whether it’s a pair of earrings or a watch, they can add a touch of elegance to one’s appearance. Movado, a watch brand that has been around since the 1800s, has been helping people elevate their fashion sense for centuries. Movado was founded in…
In this special episode of Brave Commmerce, hosts Rachel Tipograph and Sarah Hofstetter celebrate Women’s History Month by featuring key moments from past interviews with remarkable women leaders, offering insights into their experiences and showcasing diverse perspectives on leadership, innovation and empowerment. Tipograph and Hofstetter kick off the episode by highlighting that 50% of Brave…
Algorithms of Resistance. The Everyday Fight against Platform Power, by Tiziano Bonini, associate professor of Sociology of Culture and Communication at Università di Siena, and Emiliano Treré, Reader in Data Agency and Media Ecologies at Cardiff University and Codirector of the Data Justice Lab. The book is published by MIT Press and available in Open Access and in paperback.
Countless essays detail how algorithms discriminate, exploit and oppress. Fewer investigate how users appropriate and subvert algorithms for their own benefit. Drawing on their own fieldwork and interviews with workers and on case studies from Europe, Latin America, the US, North Africa and Asia, Tiziano Bonini and Emiliano Treré analyse the many tactics that ordinary people develop to evade (even if only temporarily) the constraints of algorithmic power and pursue their own political, economic, cultural or social agendas.
Algorithms of Resistance focuses on three categories of platform defiers: gig workers (in particular food delivery workers), consumers and creators of cultural content, and political activists.
Protesters are gaming Google’s algorithm so photos of Trump come up when you search ‘idiot’. Photo: Zach Gibson/Getty; Shayanne Gal/Business Insider
Casa del Rider in Naples. Photo
In the chapter dedicated to delivery workers, Treré and Bonini show how drivers explore loopholes and cheat their algorithmic bosses in an attempt to regain some agency, improve working conditions, organise forms of collective action and build solidarity bonds. Their practices of everyday microresistance can be put to the service of different intentions, some of which are not necessarily positive or morally acceptable to the majority. More often than not, however, couriers have developed practices of cooperation and solidarity that challenge the neoliberal logic and competitive behaviour encoded in algorithms. The forms of mutualism not afforded by the apps range from online private chat groups where workers exchange information, coordinate collective actions and provide mutual support to platform cooperativism which emerged a few years ago as an alternative to commercial platforms.
I Made My Shed the Top Rated Restaurant On TripAdvisor. Photo by Theo McInnes
In the field of cultural industries, the most valuable currency is visibility. The section about cultural content creators focuses on Instagram “engagement groups”, or pods, where users attempt to artificially gain visibility by exchanging “likes”, comments and other forms of engagement with each other’s content. Some content creators even manage to secure greater agency by joining an independent union. The YouTubers Union (YTU), for example, was founded in 2018 to improve the working conditions of YouTubers. A year later, it teamed up with IG Metall, the largest trade union in Europe.
While digital visibility is paramount in the cultural industry, it is a double-edged sword for political activists. Visibility can mean recognition and greater capacity to tell your stories, but it also involves increased surveillance and control. In the chapter looking at algorithmic politics, Bonini and Treré study how both institutional and civil society actors appropriate and act upon algorithms in an attempt to reach their political objectives. The authors made an important point when they mentioned the importance of looking at the workforce behind digital propaganda and manipulation, not as brainless paid trolls, but as precarious, underpaid workers who are part of their domestic media industries.
Johanna Burai, World White Web, 2015
Simon Weckert, Google Maps Hacks, 2020
There are many reasons why i would recommend this book. The first is its nuanced and honest analysis of the power struggle between apps and their users. As the authors explain, having less power than digital platforms does not automatically mean being one of the “good guys.” Couriers and influencers, for example, can devise new hacks that benefit them alone, at the expense of others. And the same algorithms used by Black Lives Matter and other organisations to advance their socio-political causes can also be appropriated by racist, homophobic and misogynistic movements, or by authoritarian regimes.
I also appreciated the cautious optimism that the authors express regarding the possible emergence of a platform working class. While they welcome these acts of microresistance and place them within the long history of workers’ protests, Treré and Bonini also note that they only represent the first step in a process of awareness-raising among a multitude of actors whose position is subordinate to the power of platforms.
According to the authors of the book, as long as the people who use these platforms every day to work, consume, communicate, inform themselves and engage in political activity do not realise the full extent of data extractivism, their agency will remain severely restricted.
Related stories: Augmented Exploitation. AI, Automation and workers who fight back, More than a Glitch. Confronting Race, Gender and Ability Bias in Tech, On the obsolescence of cognitive and creative labour, Race After Technology. Abolitionist Tools for the New Jim Code, Training Humans. How machines see and judge us, etc.
Cats and dogs have an unfortunate tendency to wreak havoc on furniture and other household items. An adorable Ikea campaign assures consumers that its products are so affordable, they don’t have to stress about replacing anything their pet destroys. The campaign, by agency Ingo Hamburg, shows various Ikea products in disrepair after animals have ruined…
On a typical afternoon in a sunny suburb, all-American teenagers Piper and Addison fawn over their favorite goth rocker in Corpse Beat magazine, snack on vegan goat’s blood and paint their faces like hard-core metalheads. Of course they do. This is, after all, Liquid Death’s twisted version of a slice of life, with e.l.f. Cosmetics…
The political news publisher Splinter relaunched Tuesday morning, three months after it was acquired by Paste Magazine in a package deal, alongside the feminist publisher Jezebel, from G/O Media for an undisclosed sum. The publisher has been dormant since November 2019 and plans to produce the aggressively left-leaning political coverage that once made it an…
When sell-side tech partners identify users in cookieless environments in ways that are unclear to the buy-side, campaign performance suffers, data shows. Go figure. These practices, dubbed ID spoofing, have been under increased scrutiny since February and are the subject of conversations within the IAB Tech Lab. While it’s tricky to fully detect when ID…
![]() |
![]() |
THE ORIGINAL? Banxo (Caisse d’Épargne) – 2017 « When was the last time you downloaded a really useful app? » Watch the TV Commercial (YouTube) Agency : Altmann+Partners (France) |
LESS ORIGINAL Globant software development – 2024 « Enough with the nonsense tech » Source : Ad Age, Shots, Clube de Criaçao Watch the TV Commercial (YouTube) Agency : GUT Buenos Aires (Argentina) |
“Cowboy Carter” is an extension of the pop superstar’s exploration of how Black creativity fuels all corners of popular music. She’s embracing the music, not the industry.
The agreement gives a much-needed shot in the arm for a program that was on life support not long ago.
In extraordinary on-air remarks, Mika Brzezinski, Joe Scarborough and Nicolle Wallace questioned their own network’s decision to hire Ronna McDaniel as a political analyst.
In extraordinary on-air remarks, Mika Brzezinski, Joe Scarborough and Nicolle Wallace questioned their own network’s decision to hire Ronna McDaniel as a political analyst.
In extraordinary on-air remarks, Mika Brzezinski, Joe Scarborough and Nicolle Wallace questioned their own network’s decision to hire Ronna McDaniel as a political analyst.