From copper mining to data extractivism? Data worth making at Chile’s Data Observatory Foundation

Author:

Tironi Rodo Martín1,Valderrama Barragán Matías2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, Chile

2. University of Warwick, UK

Abstract

The public–private initiative Data Observatory Foundation was created to make large databases, such as those of astronomical observatories, available to expand and transfer of so-called “data-centric tasks” to various domains and thereby boost the development of the digital economy, data science and artificial intelligence in the country. However, in this article, we argue that data-centric initiatives like the Data Observatory Foundation may prove to be defuturing or enacting exhausted futures that reproduce the historical extractivism and coloniality of power in Latin America. Through a qualitative case study, we analyze the narrative and economic technologies of justification deployed by the Data Observatory Foundation to justify the value of its data and the organization itself. We discuss how the narratives and economic relationships developed by the Data Observatory Foundation manifest national wounds and technological dependency that enact a data-centric coloniality. Whether by attempting to define data as the copper of the future or establishing cloud computing credits as new salary tokens in the development of artificial intelligence, the Data Observatory Foundation reproduces past mentalities within innovation circuits. Rather than replicating futures based on modern colonial extractivist logics, we propose expanding possible engagements with data and speculating alternative designs.

Funder

Fondo Nacional de Desarrollo Científico y Tecnológico

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Environmental Science (miscellaneous),Geography, Planning and Development

Reference69 articles.

1. Arancibia D, Araya M, Bayo A, et al. (2018a) ASTROdata program progress report. Report, Chilean Economic Development Agency.

2. The Data Observatory, a vehicle to foster digital economy using natural advantages in astronomy in Chile

3. AWS Promotional Credit Terms and Conditions (n.d.) Amazon Web Services, Inc. Available at: https://aws.amazon.com/es/awscredits/ (accessed 18 August 2022).

Cited by 2 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Smarter, greener extractivism: digital infrastructures and the harnessing of new resources;Information, Communication & Society;2024-04-12

2. Not Only Natural Resources: Extractivism as an Organizing Concept;Sotsiologicheskoe Obozrenie / Russian Sociological Review;2024

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