Shareveillance: Subjectivity between open and closed data

Big Data and Society 3 (2) (2016)
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Abstract

This article attempts to question modes of sharing and watching to rethink political subjectivity beyond that which is enabled and enforced by the current data regime. It identifies and examines a ‘shareveillant’ subjectivity: a form configured by the sharing and watching that subjects have to withstand and enact in the contemporary data assemblage. Looking at government open and closed data as case studies, this article demonstrates how ‘shareveillance’ produces an anti-political role for the public. In describing shareveillance as, after Jacques Rancière, a distribution of the sensible, this article posits a politico-ethical injunction to cut into the share and flow of data in order to arrange a more enabling assemblage of data and its affects. In order to interrupt shareveillance, this article borrows a concept from Édouard Glissant and his concern with raced otherness to imagine what a ‘right to opacity’ might mean in the digital context. To assert this right is not to endorse the individual subject in her sovereignty and solitude, but rather to imagine a collective political subjectivity and relationality according to the important question of what it means to ‘share well’ beyond the veillant expectations of the state.

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Citations of this work

The fabric of digital life.Andrew Iliadis & Isabel Pedersen - 2018 - Journal of Information, Communication and Ethics in Society 16 (3):311-327.

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References found in this work

The philosopher and his poor.Jacques Rancière - 2004 - Durham, NC: Duke University Press. Edited by Andrew Parker.
Keywords: A Vocabulary of Culture and Society.Raymond Williams - 1977 - Science and Society 41 (2):221-224.
Qualities of sharing and their transformations in the digital age.Andreas Wittel - 2011 - International Review of Information Ethics 15 (9):2011.

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