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Techniques of Use: Confronting Value Systems of Productivity, Progress, and Usefulness in Computing and Design

Cindy Lin, Silvia Lindtner

202147 citationsDOI

Abstract

This paper turns to one of HCI's central value systems, i.e. its commitments to usefulness and the ideal that technology enables social progress, productivity, and excellence. Specifically, we examine how the seemingly “positive” ideal to make technology “useful” – i.e. to build systems and devices that advance social and technological progress – masks various forms of violence and injustice such as colonial othering, racist exclusions, and exploitation. Drawing from ethnographic research, we show how design and computing methods from design thinking to agile theory and entrepreneurial approaches in tech production and higher education are the latest techniques in the cultivation of useful bodies on behalf of the state, the corporation, the university, and the economy. Aligning with feminist, critical race and critical computing commitments, this paper offers a genealogical approach to show how injustice and violence endure, despite and because of a narrative of progress and positive change.

Topics & Concepts

Agile software developmentProductivityExcellenceSociologyCorporationIdeal (ethics)InjusticeValue (mathematics)Engineering ethicsComputer scienceManagement scienceKnowledge managementEngineeringEpistemologyPolitical scienceManagementEconomicsEconomic growthLawPhilosophyMachine learningInnovative Human-Technology InteractionGreen IT and SustainabilityInteractive and Immersive Displays
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