The extractive infrastructures of contact tracing apps

Author:

Aouragh Miriyam1ORCID,Gürses Seda2,Pritchard Helen3ORCID,Snelting Femke4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. The Institute for Technology in the Public Interest and University of Westminster

2. The Institute for Technology in the Public Interest and Faculty of Technology, Policy and Management, TU Delft

3. The Institute for Technology in the Public Interest and Goldsmiths University of London

4. The Institute for Technology in the Public Interest and Constant, Association for Art and Media, Brussels

Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic will go down in history as a major crisis, with calls for debt moratoriums that are expected to have gruesome effects in the Global South. Another tale of this crisis that would come to dominate COVID-19 news across the world was a new technological application: the contact tracing apps. In this article, we argue that both accounts – economic implications for the Global South and the ideology of techno-solutionism – are closely related. We map the phenomenon of the tracing app onto past and present wealth accumulations. To understand these exploitative realities, we focus on the implications of contact tracing apps and their relation with extractive technologies as we build on the notion racial capitalism. By presenting themselves in isolation of capitalism and extractivism, contact tracing apps hide raw realities, concealing the supply chains that allow the production of these technologies and the exploitative conditions of labour that make their computational magic manifest itself. As a result of this artificial separation, the technological solutionism of contract tracing apps is ultimately presented as a moral choice between life and death. We regard our work as requiring continuous undoing – a necessary but unfinished formal dismantling of colonial structures through decolonial resistance.

Publisher

Intellect

Subject

General Engineering

Reference33 articles.

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2. Anon. (2020), ‘Virtual hiring: How call centers respond to COVID-19’, HireVue, 16 April, https://www.hirevue.com/blog/virtual-hiring-how-call-centers-respond-to-covid-19. Accessed June 2020.

3. Aouragh, M., Gürses, S., Pritchard, H. and Snelting, F. as Institute for Technology in the Public Interest (2020), ‘The long tail of contact tracing’, GitHub, 10 April, https://github.com/DP-3T/documents/issues/118. Accessed June 2020.

4. FCJ-196 Let’s first get things done! On division of labour and techno-political practices of delegation in times of crisis;The Fibreculture Journal,2015

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3. Public values and the interests of big tech companies: The case of the Austrian Contact Tracing App Stopp Corona;2021 14th CMI International Conference - Critical ICT Infrastructures and Platforms (CMI);2021-11-25

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