<title>“Processed Food on the Urban Data Highway. Food Delivery Services as In_Visible Infrastructure in the Production of Urbanity” </title> <meta name=“EmergeError”>

Publikation: Beiträge in SammelwerkenAufsätze in SammelwerkenForschung

Standard

<title>“Processed Food on the Urban Data Highway. Food Delivery Services as In_Visible Infrastructure in the Production of Urbanity” </title> <meta name=“EmergeError”> / Akteurinnen für urbanen Ungehorsam.
Platformization of Urban Life : Towards a Technocapitalist Transformation of European Cities. Hrsg. / Anke Strüver; Sybille Bauriedl. 1. Aufl. Bielefeld: transcript Verlag, 2022. S. 205-216 ( Urban Studies).

Publikation: Beiträge in SammelwerkenAufsätze in SammelwerkenForschung

Harvard

Akteurinnen für urbanen Ungehorsam 2022, <title>“Processed Food on the Urban Data Highway. Food Delivery Services as In_Visible Infrastructure in the Production of Urbanity” </title> <meta name=“EmergeError”> in A Strüver & S Bauriedl (Hrsg.), Platformization of Urban Life : Towards a Technocapitalist Transformation of European Cities. 1 Aufl., Urban Studies, transcript Verlag, Bielefeld, S. 205-216. https://doi.org/10.14361/9783839459645-013

APA

Akteurinnen für urbanen Ungehorsam (2022). <title>“Processed Food on the Urban Data Highway. Food Delivery Services as In_Visible Infrastructure in the Production of Urbanity” </title> <meta name=“EmergeError”> In A. Strüver, & S. Bauriedl (Hrsg.), Platformization of Urban Life : Towards a Technocapitalist Transformation of European Cities (1 Aufl., S. 205-216). ( Urban Studies). transcript Verlag. https://doi.org/10.14361/9783839459645-013

Vancouver

Akteurinnen für urbanen Ungehorsam. <title>“Processed Food on the Urban Data Highway. Food Delivery Services as In_Visible Infrastructure in the Production of Urbanity” </title> <meta name=“EmergeError”> in Strüver A, Bauriedl S, Hrsg., Platformization of Urban Life : Towards a Technocapitalist Transformation of European Cities. 1 Aufl. Bielefeld: transcript Verlag. 2022. S. 205-216. ( Urban Studies). doi: 10.14361/9783839459645-013

Bibtex

@inbook{ba627380a5aa44a591c60fb65f9fe576,
title = "“Processed Food on the Urban Data Highway. Food Delivery Services as In_Visible Infrastructure in the Production of Urbanity” : ",
abstract = "Invisibly, urban space has increasingly been infused with digital infrastructures, built upon algorithmic app architectures, shaped by information systems and data distributions not everybody has access to. One of these city-making platforms in Germany is the food delivery service Lieferando. Embodied by its riders it visibly occupies the streets, influencing our everyday cityscape through bright orange uniforms, a mass of moving advertisement columns. What stays invisible, however, is the information infrastructure behind it, delivering app-generated user data and behavioral profiles which are not only used to make profitable predictions, but which purely serve surveillance capitalist and information elitist few. This information asymmetry – upheld by the {\textquoteleft}reign{\textquoteright} of the Lieferando algorithm which structures gig work processes, but also our {\textquoteleft}taste{\textquoteright} of the city – literally {\textquoteleft}cycles{\textquoteright} around the consumer{\textquoteright}s awareness: it is continuously trying to digitally delegate and (re-)produce urbanity in a profit-oriented way, eliminating social urban spaces of encounter, exchange, and participation. The paper presentation, based on a six-month-long ethnographic research on in_visibilities of gig work as a new urban infrastructure, discusses how invisible information inequalities and {\textquoteleft}data wealth{\textquoteright} is monopolized and materialized in the city. How does it influence urban everyday life and our perception of urbanity? In which way do delivery services symbolize the capitalization of urban space (production)? Although Lieferando{\textquoteright}s mechanisms of invisibility seem to mask the true purpose of its infrastructure, moments of visible crisis unveil resistive potential. Repurposing the invisibility of digitality for their own cause, rider coalitions build similar information infrastructures, exchanging practices of resistance, and knowledge to overcome {\textquoteleft}algocracy{\textquoteright}. Additionally, their protesting bodies on the streets create a counter-visibility, revealing a system that neither cares for their workers, nor their city. We argue that thus, they call on us urbanists to question digital in_visibilities, data-privileges, and information-architectures in a city of concrete, code, and content.",
keywords = "Construction engineering and architecture, Plattform-Urbanismus, Stadtforschung, urban design, Culture and Space, Stadtforschung, gig economy, Digitalisierung, gig economy, Plattform-Urbanismus",
author = "{Akteurinnen f{\"u}r urbanen Ungehorsam} and Maja-Lee Voigt",
year = "2022",
month = sep,
day = "27",
doi = "10.14361/9783839459645-013",
language = "English",
isbn = "978-3-8376-5964-1",
series = " Urban Studies",
publisher = "transcript Verlag",
pages = "205--216",
editor = "Anke Str{\"u}ver and Sybille Bauriedl",
booktitle = "Platformization of Urban Life",
address = "Germany",
edition = "1",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - “Processed Food on the Urban Data Highway. Food Delivery Services as In_Visible Infrastructure in the Production of Urbanity”

AU - Akteurinnen für urbanen Ungehorsam

AU - Voigt, Maja-Lee

PY - 2022/9/27

Y1 - 2022/9/27

N2 - Invisibly, urban space has increasingly been infused with digital infrastructures, built upon algorithmic app architectures, shaped by information systems and data distributions not everybody has access to. One of these city-making platforms in Germany is the food delivery service Lieferando. Embodied by its riders it visibly occupies the streets, influencing our everyday cityscape through bright orange uniforms, a mass of moving advertisement columns. What stays invisible, however, is the information infrastructure behind it, delivering app-generated user data and behavioral profiles which are not only used to make profitable predictions, but which purely serve surveillance capitalist and information elitist few. This information asymmetry – upheld by the ‘reign’ of the Lieferando algorithm which structures gig work processes, but also our ‘taste’ of the city – literally ‘cycles’ around the consumer’s awareness: it is continuously trying to digitally delegate and (re-)produce urbanity in a profit-oriented way, eliminating social urban spaces of encounter, exchange, and participation. The paper presentation, based on a six-month-long ethnographic research on in_visibilities of gig work as a new urban infrastructure, discusses how invisible information inequalities and ‘data wealth’ is monopolized and materialized in the city. How does it influence urban everyday life and our perception of urbanity? In which way do delivery services symbolize the capitalization of urban space (production)? Although Lieferando’s mechanisms of invisibility seem to mask the true purpose of its infrastructure, moments of visible crisis unveil resistive potential. Repurposing the invisibility of digitality for their own cause, rider coalitions build similar information infrastructures, exchanging practices of resistance, and knowledge to overcome ‘algocracy’. Additionally, their protesting bodies on the streets create a counter-visibility, revealing a system that neither cares for their workers, nor their city. We argue that thus, they call on us urbanists to question digital in_visibilities, data-privileges, and information-architectures in a city of concrete, code, and content.

AB - Invisibly, urban space has increasingly been infused with digital infrastructures, built upon algorithmic app architectures, shaped by information systems and data distributions not everybody has access to. One of these city-making platforms in Germany is the food delivery service Lieferando. Embodied by its riders it visibly occupies the streets, influencing our everyday cityscape through bright orange uniforms, a mass of moving advertisement columns. What stays invisible, however, is the information infrastructure behind it, delivering app-generated user data and behavioral profiles which are not only used to make profitable predictions, but which purely serve surveillance capitalist and information elitist few. This information asymmetry – upheld by the ‘reign’ of the Lieferando algorithm which structures gig work processes, but also our ‘taste’ of the city – literally ‘cycles’ around the consumer’s awareness: it is continuously trying to digitally delegate and (re-)produce urbanity in a profit-oriented way, eliminating social urban spaces of encounter, exchange, and participation. The paper presentation, based on a six-month-long ethnographic research on in_visibilities of gig work as a new urban infrastructure, discusses how invisible information inequalities and ‘data wealth’ is monopolized and materialized in the city. How does it influence urban everyday life and our perception of urbanity? In which way do delivery services symbolize the capitalization of urban space (production)? Although Lieferando’s mechanisms of invisibility seem to mask the true purpose of its infrastructure, moments of visible crisis unveil resistive potential. Repurposing the invisibility of digitality for their own cause, rider coalitions build similar information infrastructures, exchanging practices of resistance, and knowledge to overcome ‘algocracy’. Additionally, their protesting bodies on the streets create a counter-visibility, revealing a system that neither cares for their workers, nor their city. We argue that thus, they call on us urbanists to question digital in_visibilities, data-privileges, and information-architectures in a city of concrete, code, and content.

KW - Construction engineering and architecture

KW - Plattform-Urbanismus

KW - Stadtforschung

KW - urban design

KW - Culture and Space

KW - Stadtforschung

KW - gig economy

KW - Digitalisierung

KW - gig economy

KW - Plattform-Urbanismus

UR - https://www.transcript-verlag.de/978-3-8376-5964-1/platformization-of-urban-life/?number=978-3-8394-5964-5

UR - https://d-nb.info/1246612232

UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/5bce2614-d922-3ef9-a918-306a0f5cad51/

U2 - 10.14361/9783839459645-013

DO - 10.14361/9783839459645-013

M3 - Contributions to collected editions/anthologies

SN - 978-3-8376-5964-1

T3 - Urban Studies

SP - 205

EP - 216

BT - Platformization of Urban Life

A2 - Strüver, Anke

A2 - Bauriedl, Sybille

PB - transcript Verlag

CY - Bielefeld

ER -

Zuletzt angesehen

Publikationen

  1. Schwerpunkt: Bildung, verweigert. Zum Verhältnis von Bildung, Institution und Romanform von Anton Reiser bis zu Der Hals der Giraffe
  2. Mündliche Lernertexte auf der Zweinull-Bühne – Mediale Inszenierungen im Englischunterricht am Beispiel eines Schulpodcast-Projekts
  3. Comparing Germany and Israel regarding debates on policy-making at the beginning of life: PGD, NIPT and their paths of routinization
  4. Konflikte, Beschwerden und Probleme - wertvolle Indikatoren und Handlungsfelder für die Entwicklung der Leuphana Universität Lüneburg
  5. Textkohäsion und deren Bedeutung für das Textverständnis: Wie reagieren Lernende auf temporale Kohäsion am Beispiel eines Sachtextes?
  6. Verhütung als Mittel gegen Bevölkerungswachstum. Expertendiskussion und öffentliche Debatten in Westdeutschland in den 1960er Jahren
  7. MEHRSPRACH-ICH: Zur Stärkung multipler sprachlicher Identitäten und literaler Kompetenzen in einem Vorleseprojekt in Kindertagesstätten
  8. Eva-Prim - Evaluation im Primarbereich: Sprachförderung in alltäglichen und fachlichen Kontexten im Rahmen der Bund-Länder-Initiative BiSS.
  9. Developing learning environments for independent work – preparing Austrian future chemistry teachers for inquiry-based science education
  10. [Review] Tracy McDonald e Daniel Vandersommers (a cura di), Zoo Studies. A New Humanities, Montreal, McGill¿Queen¿s University Press, 2019, 345 pp.
  11. Stakeholder engagement in Water Framework Directive planning in the United Kingdom: Two case studies from Northern Ireland and Scotland
  12. Corporate Volunteering – theoretische Überlegungen, empirische Befunde und eine aktuelle Bestandsaufnahme der wissenschaftlichen Diskussion
  13. Mündliches Beschreiben von Bildern im Kontext des Kunstunterrichts zwischen schulsprachlichen Erwartungen und fachlichen Anforderungen
  14. Der Zusammenhang zwischen Beschulungsart, Klassenkomposition und schulischen Kompetenzen von Kindern mit sonderpädagogischem Förderbedarf
  15. Different Subcultures in Residential Groups in Germany – Implications for Participation and the Victimization of Children and Young People
  16. Bildung für eine nachhaltige Entwicklung als innovatives Konzept für Qualitätsentwicklung und Professionalisierung in der LehrerInnenbilung
  17. Tracking Sustainability Targets with Quantitative Indicator Systems for Performance Measurement of Industrial Symbiosis in Industrial Parks
  18. Förderung Benachteiligter in Vergangenheit und Zukunft mit dem Ziel der Berufsausbildung oder der Vorbereitung auf ein Leben in Prekarität?
  19. New evidence for vegetation development and timing of Upper Middle Pleistocene interglacials in Northern Germany and tentative correlations
  20. Entwicklung eines niveaustufenbezogenen, phasenübergreifenden Berufsfähigkeitsprofils für angehende Lehrkräfte - ein dialogorientierter Prozess
  21. Diskurs über Nachhaltigkeit als Herausforderung für Disziplinen zur ethischen Vergewisserung – konkretisiert am Beispiel Erziehungswissenschaft
  22. Grundlagen und Bedeutung der grenzüberschreitenden Vermögensabschöpfung unter besonderer Berücksichtigung der Verordnung (EU) 2018/1805 – Teil 1
  23. Grundlagen und Bedeutung der grenzüberschreitenden Vermögensabschöpfung unter besonderer Berücksichtigung der Verordnung (EU) 2018/1805 – Teil 2
  24. Implikationen der Effectuation-Theorie für die Entrepreneurship Education - Geschäftsmodellentwicklung zur Förderung unternehmerischen Potenzials
  25. Überprüfung eines Kompetenzmodells und Messinstruments zur Strukturierung allgemeiner pädagogischer Kompetenz in der universitären Lehrerbildung
  26. Kollaborative Kurzfilmproduktion als innovativer Ansatz in der Hochschulbildung für nachhaltige Entwicklung an der Leuphana Universität Lüneburg
  27. Luminescence dating of late holocene dunes showing remnants of early settlement in Cuddalore and evidence of monsoon activity in south east India
  28. Die Operationalisierung nachhaltiger Strategiepfade für die deutsche Energieversorgung unter besonderer Berücksichtigung der erneuerbaren Energien
  29. Book review of Kang-Kwong Luke/Theodossia-Souala Pavlidou: Telephone Calls. Unity and Diversity in Conversational Structure across Languages and Cultures.
  30. Ieva Astahovska et al. (eds) Revisiting Footnotes. Footprints of the Recent Past in the Post‐Socialist Region. Riga: Latvian Centre for Contemporary Art, 2015.
  31. Der Einfluss eines Informationsvideos auf die Akzeptanz chronischer Schmerzpatienten gegenüber internetbasierten psychologischen Schmerzinterventionen
  32. The longitudinal prediction of costs due to health care uptake and productivity losses in a cohort of employees with and without depression or anxiety.
  33. Methodische Grundlagen für die Entwicklung eines Instruments zur vergleichenden Analyse mündlicher Sprachproben von Kindern mit Deutsch als Zweitsprache
  34. Von Mengen, Zahlen und Operationen bis hin zu Daten und Zufall – Erprobung eines Itempools zum Erfassen der mathematischen Kompetenz von Kindergartenkindern
  35. The same, but different? Learning activities, perceived learning success, and social support during the practical term of teacher education in times of COVID-19
  36. National Cultural Values, Firm’s Cultural Orientation, Innovation and Performance: Testing Cultural Universals and Specific Contingencies Across Five Countries.
  37. Rezenssion zu "Heino Apel, Susanne Kraft (Hrsg.): Online lehren. Planung und Gestaltung netzbasierter Weiterbildung, W. Bertelsmann Verlag, Bielefeld 2003, 276 Seiten"
  38. Buchbesprechungen zur Fachdidaktik: Kerstin Pohl: Gesellschaftstheorie in der Politikdidaktik. Die Theorierezeption bei Hermann Giesecke. Wochenschau-Verlag, 2011
  39. Kopulations-Kulissen: Ergebnisse und Forschungsperspektiven einer explorativen Studie zu Selektions- und Nutzungsbedingungen von Popmusik in erotischen Kontexten.
  40. Zwischen Blindflug und wirksamer Assistenz. Korrektives Feedback beim individuellen, fremdsprachlichen formfokussierten Üben mit intelligenter Sprachlernsoftware
  41. Elaborierte Rückmeldungen zur Qualität von Unterricht: Über empirisch abgesicherte Bezugsnormen als Grundlage für die Weiterentwicklung von Unterricht und Schule.
  42. Corrigendum to “Flexible electricity generation, grid exchange and storage for the transition to a 100% renewable energy system in Europe” [Renew. Energy 139 (2019) 80-101]
  43. Evidence for climatic changes around the Matuyama-Brunhes Boundary (MBB) inferred from a multi-proxy palaeoenvironmental study of the GBY#2 core, Jordan River Valley, Israel
  44. Sammelrezension: Siegfried, Detlev/von Hodenberg, Christina: “Wo ‘1968’ liegt. Reform und Revolte in der Geschichte der Bundesrepublik” – Gilcher-Holtey, Ingrid: “1968. Eine Zeitreise”
  45. Konzepte der Netzwerkbildung und Professionalisierung des beruflichen Bildungspersonals zur Bewältigung der Übergangs- und Integrationsprobleme in den neuen Bundesländern
  46. Sarah Gaubitz: Wertorientierungen von Grundschulkindern im Kontext nachhaltiger Entwicklung. Eine empirische Untersuchung zum moralischen Urteilen über Ressourcendilemmata.
  47. Kooperative Qualifizierung von Lehrern und Ausbildern als Beitrag zur Professionalisierung. Ergebnisse einer empirischen Untersuchung im Rahmen des Projektes "XENOS-Mentoren"