From b4151499ebf2faab838f8f46a3c025a820e81fdd Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: ccl Date: Tue, 17 Nov 2020 02:57:33 +0100 Subject: [PATCH] went through all pages except for conclusion --- .../5-end-of-the-module.md | 6 ++++-- 1 file changed, 4 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) diff --git a/content/Section 6 - Critical Interventions Through Bots (exercise)/5-end-of-the-module.md b/content/Section 6 - Critical Interventions Through Bots (exercise)/5-end-of-the-module.md index 6626c1a..de44c77 100644 --- a/content/Section 6 - Critical Interventions Through Bots (exercise)/5-end-of-the-module.md +++ b/content/Section 6 - Critical Interventions Through Bots (exercise)/5-end-of-the-module.md @@ -3,8 +3,10 @@ Slug: 05-s6-step-5 Date: 2020-11-01 12:05 Summary: End of the module -We have reached the end of the module. The term *digital infrapunctures* leaves us with possibilities to critically engage with digital infrastructures, that ask for further unfolding and experimentation. Infrapunctures can be small. Every intervention can trigger bigger ones. To make sure that we can rely on truly fair operating infrastructures, we need a whole range of actions that expose infrastructural stress points. Could these include activist bots marking hurt? Poetic bots proposing alternative readings? Or annoying bots asking for attention? +We have reached the end of the module. The term *digital infrapunctures* leaves us with possibilities to critically engage with digital infrastructures, that ask for further unfolding and experimentation. Infrapunctures can be small. An intervention can trigger bigger ones. To make sure that we can rely on truly fair operating infrastructures, we need a whole range of actions that expose infrastructural stress points. Could these include activist bots marking hurt? Poetic bots proposing alternative readings? Or annoying bots asking for attention? Eventually however, when we zoom out a bit, the question that we should attend to first is the following: -In a time of infrastructural complexity, do you put your effort into destabilizing an existing system where the hurt is already beyond reparation or do you use your energy to punctuate another space that at least attempts to do things ethically and has the potential to provide agency over their tranformations to a broader group of people? +In a time of infrastructural complexity, how do we balance our efforts of destabilizing existing infrastructures that have been corrupted by corporate gain and where the hurt is already beyond reparation and using our energy to support infrastructures that have the potential to provide agency over their transformations to a broader group of people? + +Although bots are clearly not a solution to these problems, they present an exciting opportunity to think through infrastructural embodiments and to acquire a certain intimacy with its materiality that might lead to tactics to optimise for the benefit of the communities who use them.