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Data Work and Territory: The Latin American Experience

Prof Julian Posada, Yale University

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Concealed behind digital platforms, a vast, dispersed, and largely invisible workforce quietly generates and annotates the data that powers today’s AI boom. In Platform Extractivism, information scientist Julián Posada argues that these platforms are engines of extraction rooted in the enduring social inequalities and transnational power disparities of coloniality. Posada reveals that technology, especially today’s so-called AI, is not merely artificial, autonomous, or intelligent; it inherently relies on and extracts from humanity. Drawing on mixed-methods research on three platforms in the Venezuelan data work sector, Posada exposes the human cost of this technology, revealing how digital platforms have capitalized on economic instability, targeting vulnerable populations to extract value from their precarious labor.
A critical intervention in the debate on the future of work, this book provides profound insight into the implications of artificial intelligence, moving beyond the context of advanced economies to focus on the labor involved in its production. Posada questions whether AI is a tool for freedom, or an engine for widening the gap between the unseen workers who teach machines, and the corporations that profit from them.
 
 
Julian Posada is Assistant Professor of American Studies at Yale University and Just Tech Fellow at the Social Science Research Council. His research centres on the social and cultural dimensions of information, with a particular emphasis on the relationship between labour and the development of artificial intelligence.
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