Data Out of Place: Toxic Traces and the Politics of Recycling

Nanna Bonde Thylstrup

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Abstract

It has become increasingly common to talk about “digital traces”. The idea that we leak, drop and leave traces wherever we go has given rise to a culture of traceability, and this culture of traceability, I argue, is intimately entangled with a socio-economics of data disposability and recycling. While the culture of traceability has often been theorised in terms of, and in relation to, privacy, I offer another approach, framing digital traces instead as a question of waste. This perspective, I argue, allows us to connect to, extend and nuance existing discussions of digital traces. It shows us that data traces raise questions about not only how data capitalism tracks individual and multiple data behaviours, but also how it links to social and environmental toxicities in the form of abuse and environmental pollution, which follow gendered and colonial structures of violence.
OriginalsprogEngelsk
TidsskriftBig Data & Society
Vol/bind6
Udgave nummer2
Antal sider9
DOI
StatusUdgivet - jul. 2019
Udgivet eksterntJa

Bibliografisk note

Published online: 30. September 2019

Emneord

  • Digital traces
  • Knowledge production
  • Big Data ecologies
  • Toxic data
  • Recycling
  • Waste

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