User:Martin/Final presentation: Difference between revisions
Line 108: | Line 108: | ||
<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> | <br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> | ||
=== | ===May 2022=== | ||
(insert description) | (insert description) | ||
<br> | <br> |
Revision as of 22:19, 10 June 2022
W.I.P
This page is under construction, please stand by and visit https://project.xpub.nl/Count-On-Me/or the graduation board
Thank you
Special Issues Contributions
Reading Practice
Best of readings
- Certeau, M., (1984). The practice of everyday life
- Crary, J., (2001). Suspensions of Perception: Attention, Spectacle, and Modern Culture
- Crawford, K., Lingel, J., Karppi, T., (2015). Our metrics, ourselves: A hundred years of self-tracking from the weight scale to the wrist wearable device
- Debord, G., (197). The Society of the Spectacle
- Foucault, M., (1982). Technologies of the Self. [online] Available at: https://www.foucault.info/documents/foucault.technologiesOfSelf.en/ [Accessed March 29 2022].
- Foucault, M., (1977). Discipline and Punish: The Birth of the Prison
- Fritsch, K., (2018). Towards an emancipatory understanding of widespread datafication [online] Available at: https://medium.com/ [Accessed March 11 2022].
- Kholeif, O., (2018). Goodbye, World! — Looking at Art in the Digital Age
- Morozov, E., (2019). Capitalism's New Clothes. The Baffler [e-journal] Available through: https://thebaffler.com [Accessed March 11 2022].
- Seymour, R., (2019). The Twittering Machine
- Wu, T., (2016). The Attention Merchants: The Epic Scramble to Get Inside Our Heads. Available at: https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2018/10/yuval-noah-harari-technology-tyranny/568330/
- Zuboff, S., (2019). The age of surveillance capitalism
Prototyping Practice
October 2021
(insert description)
November 2021
(insert description)
December 2021
(insert description)
February 2022
(insert description)
March 2022
(insert description)
April 2022
(insert description)
May 2022
(insert description)
Thesis: Hidden in plain sight
Hidden in plain sight:
Understanding our consent and distrust in the context of capitalist techno-surveillance
1 → Homo Data
2 → Addiction machines
3 → Self-empowerment
4 → Agree and continue?
Graduation Work: Count On Me
Count On Me
"Count On Me" is an interactive data collector that rewards your attention span and responsiveness in crypto-currency.
In order to maximize profits, you will need to accurately position yourself in the space and pay attention to the instructions. Each micro-task performed allows the visitor to get extra payouts and unlock different stages ranging from stock ticker interfaces, wellness applications, gambling games, captchas, streaming platforms, self-checkouts, eg. Once ready to leave, the visitor can convert its crypto-earnings into euros by refering to a randomly assigned conversion rate.