One of those ideas that makes you jump, by drawing clear attention to something that you already knew, without having appreciated its significance. Specifically, when you interact with a service online or by phone there may be software in action that mediates how you experience the service: by sorting you. Live in a high income postcode? Get routed to a sales person more quickly than if your IP address makes you look as if you come from a less promising area. On record as an awkward customer or "time-waster"? Then wait in the queue. These issues are being examined by Stephen Graham in a British Academy Readership Project: Rethinking the digital divide: the software-sorted society.
And from the same University of Durham research group is Multispeed cities and the logistics of living in an information age, a project that is examining the differences in how different communities use and interact with technology.
Dead link removed, 5/6/2011. Link made to Steve Graham's new place of work, 26/11/2012.
Thank you for this equally interesting and depressing piece. While I always saw sorting as a means of targeting offers to high spenders, the obvious corollary of denying service to the marginalised hadn't struck me until now.
G
Posted by: George | 21/01/2007 at 18:12
Hi Seb:
Check out Simon and Anna Grant's preliminary investigation of ethics and eportfolios [70 kB PDF] from EIfEL's ePortfolio 2006 conference. They discuss a pro-active approach to demonstrating your ethics just as you would your skills (moral skills?); not quite the same thing, but the first few slides should resonate.
Posted by: Don Presant | 26/01/2007 at 12:35