diff --git a/content/Section 2 - Harm in Computational Infrastructures/2-introduction-seda.md b/content/Section 2 - Harm in Computational Infrastructures/2-introduction-seda.md index 8611f60..e2b5be0 100644 --- a/content/Section 2 - Harm in Computational Infrastructures/2-introduction-seda.md +++ b/content/Section 2 - Harm in Computational Infrastructures/2-introduction-seda.md @@ -39,9 +39,9 @@ We will introduce the work of Seda [delete first name to be consistent with else # Footnotes -[^pots]: Bogdan Lulynych, Rebekah Overdorf, Carmela Troncoso, Seda Gürses "POTs: Protective Optimization Technologies" (2020). +[^pots]: Bogdan Lulynych, Rebekah Overdorf, Carmela Troncoso, Seda Gürses "POTs: Protective Optimization Technologies" (2020) -[^progammableinfrastructures]: Seda Gürses, Roel Dobbe, Martha Poon "Seminar on Programmable Infrastructures" (2020). +[^progammableinfrastructures]: Seda Gürses, Roel Dobbe, Martha Poon "Seminar on Programmable Infrastructures" (2020) [^titipi]: Miriyam Aouragh, Seda Gürses, Femke Snelting, Helen Pritchard "The Institute for Technology in the Public Interest" (accessed on 2020) diff --git a/content/Section 3 - Bots/1-introduction.md b/content/Section 3 - Bots/1-introduction.md index 42fd42d..bebd521 100644 --- a/content/Section 3 - Bots/1-introduction.md +++ b/content/Section 3 - Bots/1-introduction.md @@ -5,9 +5,9 @@ Summary: What type of bots are being made? [bridge to previous section e.g. having just explored infrastrucutral harms we now move to explore bots]When we say bots, we refer to software agents which automatise certain actions and can run autonomously or semi-autonomously. [perhaps provide an example to make it more concrete to the reader] -The particular bots we are interested in for this online module are those that act as an interface between the digital platform and human users, or what [Andreas] Hepp calls communicative robots[^hepp], robots that "are defined as autonomously operating systems designed for the purpose of quasi-communication with human beings to enable further algorithmic-based functionalities – often but not always on the basis of artificial intelligence" [page numbers]. +The particular bots we are interested in for this online module are those that act as an interface between the digital platform and human users, or what Andreas Hepp calls communicative robots[^hepp], robots that "are defined as autonomously operating systems designed for the purpose of quasi-communication with human beings to enable further algorithmic-based functionalities – often but not always on the basis of artificial intelligence" [page numbers]. -In this section, we will introduce Darius Kazemi, a computer programmer and artist, and Andreas Hepp, a professor of media and communications [replace with [professor of media and communications at the ZeMKI, University of Bremen]] +In this section, we will introduce Andreas Hepp, professor of media and communications at the ZeMKI, University of Bremen. [^hepp]: Hepp, Andreas. "Artificial companions, social bots and work bots: communicative robots as research objects of media and communication studies" *Media, Culture & Society* Volume 42 (2020): 1410-1426. diff --git a/content/Section 3 - Bots/10-infrastructural-embodiment.md b/content/Section 3 - Bots/2-infrastructural-embodiment.md similarity index 96% rename from content/Section 3 - Bots/10-infrastructural-embodiment.md rename to content/Section 3 - Bots/2-infrastructural-embodiment.md index f521d17..ce11a49 100644 --- a/content/Section 3 - Bots/10-infrastructural-embodiment.md +++ b/content/Section 3 - Bots/2-infrastructural-embodiment.md @@ -1,6 +1,6 @@ Title: Introduction: Andreas Hepp -Slug: 10-s3-infrastructural-embodiment -Date: 2020-11-01 12:10 +Slug: 02-s3-infrastructural-embodiment +Date: 2020-11-01 12:01 Summary: *Communicative bots*, *communicative embodiment* and *infrastructural embodiment*. Andreas Hepp is Professor for Media and Communications at the ZeMKI (Centre for Media, Communication and Information Research), University of Bremen, Germany. In the paper[^paper] we mentioned in the introduction to this chapter, he distinguishes three kinds of *communicative bots*: artificial companions, social bots and work bots. For Hepp, communicative bots are characterised through a double embodiment: a *communicative embodiment*, referring to the bots' human-like representation, and an *infrastructural embodiment*, referring to the bots being embedded in the materiality of the infrastructure on which they are active. diff --git a/content/Section 3 - Bots/11-andreas-question-1.md b/content/Section 3 - Bots/3-andreas-question-1.md similarity index 83% rename from content/Section 3 - Bots/11-andreas-question-1.md rename to content/Section 3 - Bots/3-andreas-question-1.md index 7ce47e5..2c632ff 100644 --- a/content/Section 3 - Bots/11-andreas-question-1.md +++ b/content/Section 3 - Bots/3-andreas-question-1.md @@ -1,6 +1,6 @@ Title: Question 1: What are communicative bots and why are they important to study now? -Slug: 11-s3-question-1 -Date: 2020-11-01 12:11 +Slug: 03-s3-question-1 +Date: 2020-11-01 12:02 Summary: A video contribution of Andreas Hepp.