[governance] CfP "Automating Communication", Keynote Zuboff – DEADLINE 15.07.
Christian Katzenbach (via governance Mailing List)
governance at lists.riseup.net
Thu Jun 13 04:33:15 EDT 2019
Dear colleagues,
the Alexander von Humboldt Institute for Internet and Society (HIIG) and the Weizenbaum-Institute for the Networked Society are jointly hosting an International Conference:
Automating Communication in the Networked Society: Contexts, Consequences, Critique
November 6-8, 2019 in Berlin
Keynote by Shoshana Zuboff
This is the annual conference of the German Communication Association’s Division “Digital Communication”. The theme speaks to a broad set of issues, including the dynamics of innovation, actors and strategies, digital methods and their critical reflection, and theoretical contributions. Please find the Call for Papers below and at the conference website:
https://www.digikomm2019.de
Deadline for abstracts submission is July 15, 2019. Don’t hesitate to contact me if you have questions.
The keynote by Shoshana Zuboff (Harvard, author of „the age of surveillance capitalism“) is also part of the high-profile lecture series „Making Sense of the Digital Society“ hosted by the HIIG: https://www.hiig.de/en/making-sense-of-the-digital-society/
Best,
Christian Katzenbach
Senior Researcher, Alexander von Humboldt Institute for Internet and Society, Berlin
http://www.hiig.de/staff/christian-katzenbach/
######
AUTOMATING COMMUNICATION IN THE NETWORKED SOCIETY:
CONTEXTS, CONSEQUENCES, CRITIQUE
November 6-8, 2019 in Berlin
Keynote by Shoshana Zuboff
A defining—yet understudied—feature of digital communication is automation: the
production of content, the distribution of information and messages, the curation of media
use and the governance of content are all increasingly shaped and influenced by
automated processes and automated actors.
Algorithms automate the production of content, algorithms operate the selection and
filtering of information in news, news feeds and search engines, they attribute relevance
and popularity, perform content moderation and fact-checking. Automated actors such as
social bots participate both in organizational communication such as customer service
and, as a potential force of manipulation, in election campaigns. While communication
scholars have focused their attention on algorithms in diverse areas of the field, they can
be studied as a means of the broader process of automating social relations and public
communication.
Because automation takes place in hybrid media systems, automation is not restrained to
social media platforms or apps, but also plays a role in journalism and legacy media, as
well as in interpersonal communication. Algorithms write simple news articles, rank mostread articles, and shape what journalists find relevant or newsworthy. Networked
societies rely on permanent connectedness, all of which takes place in strongly automated,
curated environments of data gathering, sharing, liking, commenting: monitoring complex
actor-networks, self mass-communication, or organizing protest through connective
action.
The story of automating communication has two sides: the few who are shaping, designing,
programming and implementing algorithms and other technologies, and the many who are
using and are impacted by automated communication. In this regard, automation raises
questions of power and power relations. Automating core features of democracy such as
the assignment of relevance and legitimacy to issues, actors, and specific content, based on
data and algorithms controlled and operated by a few private companies, challenges
notions of transparency, due process, and legitimacy. What are the regulatory measures to
curb this power? And are automation, algorithms, and artificial intelligence really
meaningful answers to social problems?
Submissions may cover one or several of the following aspects:
1. Theoretical innovations
The process and consequences of automating communication challenge theoretical
concepts. Are bots actors? Are algorithms institutions? Are software developers
communicators? Does automated communication cause dissonance and disrupted public
spheres, and how? Are concepts around consonance and deliberation really “out of touch
with reality” (Pfetsch & Bennett 2018)? How does automated communication affect media
use and media effects? How can we theoretically model automated communication?
2. Dynamics of communication
Algorithms are at the core of automation, because automation works through algorithms.
But how do they change and challenge the dynamics, the processes, and structuration of
communication? How do search engines impact on public communication and information
retrieval? How does the curation of news feeds work and how do they affect how media
users receive information? What causes and influences the viral distribution of content?
How do hate speech and “fake news” travel in networks of social media platforms and
legacy media? Do algorithms cause filter bubbles and echo chambers? What is the impact
of the increasing automatic detection of content deemed illegitimate (e.g., hate speech,
copyright violation, nudity) in social media and comment section? What is the role of
datafication for automated and automating communication?
3. Actors and strategies, accountability and governance
Automating communication affects and involves a variety of actors: when algorithms
produce content, this changes the effort and role of journalists. How do media actors work
with algorithmic content production? Are journalists “gaming” the algorithms of platforms,
and how? Who creates the tools and affordances that automate communication—and
under which conditions? What happens when low-wage employees execute highly
automated tasks, partly in order to mimic algorithms and artificial intelligence
(“fauxtomation”)? New and (semi-)automated actors such as trolls, connected activist, and
social bots alter the strategies of campaigning and the way parties and other organizations
plan their activities. Who can be held accountable for automated communication? What
are challenges and possible solutions for regulation and media policy?
4. Methods and critical reflection of methods
Studying automated communication often involves computational methods and trace data.
But qualitative methods such as ethnography, interviews or observations can also help to
understand how algorithms are created, platforms are shaped, and actors use or make
sense of automated communication. Particularly research focusing on social media
platforms faces severe challenges of data access and data management nowadays, dealing
with data protection regulation, privacy issues, and proprietary data. Analyses of
automated actors, such as bots, rely on black-boxed tools and call for interdisciplinary
approaches. We thus also invite submissions with a critical perspective on research
methods, revisiting research ethics and quality standards.
5. Open call
In addition to topic-specific submissions, there is an open call for current research on
digital communication. We also welcome submissions that are not directly related to the
conference theme but address pertinent issues of the research field. This must be noted in
the submission.
Submissions
Extended abstracts (4,000 to 5,000 characters, exclusive bibliography and any appendices)
can be submitted by 16 June 2019 in electronic form (*.docx, *.rtf or *.odt; not *.pdf) as email
attachments to submissions at digikomm2019.de The abstracts must be made
anonymous by means of a separate cover page and the removal of all identifying
information from the text and document settings.
All submissions will be evaluated in a peer review according to the following criteria
customary in the German Communication Association: theoretical foundation, relevance of
research questions, method/procedure, novelty/originality, clarity and conciseness of
presentation. The results of the review process will be announced by mid-August 2019.
Organization
The conference will take place from November 6-8, 2019 in Berlin. The event is hosted by
the Weizenbaum Institute for the Networked Society (FU Berlin) and the Alexander von
Humboldt Institute for Internet and Society. More information will be added on the
website, such as location, program, and social events: www.digikomm2019.de
Hosts and contact
German Communication Association, Digital Communication Division
Christian Katzenbach, katzenbach at hiig.de
Christian Pentzold, christian.pentzold at uni-bremen.de
Weizenbaum Institute for the Networked Society/FU Berlin and Alexander von Humboldt
Institute for Internet and Society
Ulrike Klinger, ulrike.klinger at fu-berlin.de
Christian Katzenbach, katzenbach at hiig.de
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