Datafictions: or how measurements and predictive analytics rule imagined future worlds

As the digital revolution continues and our lives become increasingly governed by smart technologies, there is a rising need for reflection and critical debate about where we are, where we are headed, and where we want to be. Against this background, the paper suggests that one way to foster such discussion is by engaging with the world of fiction, with imaginative stories that explore the spaces, places, and politics of alternative realities. Hence, after a concise discussion of the concept of speculative fiction, we introduce the notion of datafictions as an umbrella term for speculative stories that deal with the datafication of society in both imaginative and imaginable ways. We then outline and briefly discuss fifteen datafictions subdivided into five main categories: surveillance; social sorting; prediction; advertising and corporate power; hubris, breakdown, and the end of Big Data. In a concluding section, we argue for the increased use of speculative fiction in education, but also as a tool to examine how specific technologies are culturally imagined and what kind of futures are considered plausible given current implementations and trajectories. Abstract

[1]  Gernot Rieder,et al.  Datatrust: Or, the political quest for numerical evidence and the epistemologies of Big Data , 2016 .

[2]  M. Atwood Writing with Intent: Essays, Reviews, Personal Prose--1983-2005 , 2005 .

[3]  Cynthia Selin,et al.  Negotiating Plausibility: Intervening in the Future of Nanotechnology , 2011, Sci. Eng. Ethics.

[4]  Gordon Johnson,et al.  The Science and the Fiction , 1971 .

[5]  F. Pohl,et al.  The Space Merchants , 1953 .

[6]  James A. Reggia,et al.  The rise of machine consciousness: Studying consciousness with computational models , 2013, Neural Networks.

[7]  Robert Penn,et al.  [The circle]. , 1967, Canadian Psychiatric Association journal.

[8]  Assessing the Societal Implications of Emerging Technologies: Anticipatory Governance in Practice , 2017 .

[9]  David Lyon,et al.  Surveillance, Snowden, and Big Data: Capacities, consequences, critique , 2014, Big Data Soc..

[10]  Thomas Völker,et al.  The Circular Economy in Europe , 2019 .

[11]  David K. Ream,et al.  The Matrix , 2003, Think.

[12]  Katharina Weiss,et al.  On Nineteen Eighty Four , 2016 .

[13]  A. Cutter-Mackenzie,et al.  Children of an Earth to Come: Speculative Fiction, Geophilosophy and Climate Change Education Research , 2017 .

[14]  Carol Harris,et al.  Minority report. , 2002, The Health service journal.

[15]  Frank A. Pasquale The Black Box Society: The Secret Algorithms That Control Money and Information , 2015 .

[16]  Joe Hempen Global Innovation , 2002 .

[17]  A. Srivastava,et al.  Framework Analysis: A Qualitative Methodology for Applied Policy Research , 2009 .

[18]  Nicholas Mattei,et al.  Teaching AI Ethics Using Science Fiction , 2015, AAAI Workshop: AI and Ethics.

[19]  Michaela Mueller Acting in An Uncertain World: An Essay on Technical Democracy , 2011 .

[20]  Chris Arney Social Physics: How Good Ideas Spread - the Lessons from a New Science , 2014 .

[21]  Johannes Konert,et al.  Who is the Perfect Match? , 2018, i-com.

[22]  M. Winiski,et al.  SF and Speculative Novels , 2013 .

[23]  S. Jasanoff,et al.  Keeping Technologies Out: Sociotechnical Imaginaries and the Formation of National Technopolitical Identity , 2015 .

[24]  Sabine Maasen,et al.  Governing Future Technologies : Nanotechnology and the Rise of an Assessment Regime , 2010 .

[25]  M. Hajer The living institutions of the EU: Analysing governance as performance , 2006 .

[26]  H. D. Vries Data Protection: Laws of the World (losbladig) , 2009 .

[27]  J. Overhage,et al.  Sorting Things Out: Classification and Its Consequences , 2001, Annals of Internal Medicine.

[28]  P. Thomas Introduction: Challenging Science Fiction and Speculative Fiction , 2013 .

[29]  L. Else Review: The Year of the Flood by Margaret Atwood , 2009 .

[30]  P. Macnaghten,et al.  Understanding Public Responses to Emerging Technologies: A Narrative Approach , 2015 .

[31]  David H. Guston,et al.  Stitching Together Creativity and Responsibility , 2016 .

[32]  D. Boyd,et al.  CRITICAL QUESTIONS FOR BIG DATA , 2012 .

[33]  Henry Lowood Sorting Things Out: Classification and Its Consequences (review) , 2001 .

[34]  G. Antoniou,et al.  The terminator , 2017, Nature.

[35]  D. Guston Toward Anticipatory Governance , 2007 .

[36]  P. Manning The Rise of Big Data Policing: Surveillance, Race, and the Future of Law Enforcement , 2019, Contemporary Sociology: A Journal of Reviews.

[37]  D. Cottom Purity , 1989, Critical Inquiry.

[38]  Tony Doyle,et al.  Weapons of Math Destruction: How Big Data Increases Inequality and Threatens Democracy , 2017, Inf. Soc..

[39]  Michelle Murphy,et al.  Anticipation: Technoscience, life, affect, temporality , 2009 .

[40]  Helmut Krcmar,et al.  Big Data , 2014, Wirtschaftsinf..

[41]  Marcie Goodman Future Crimes: Inside the Digital Underground and the Battle for Our Connected World , 2001 .

[42]  K. Harding I, Robot , 2017, Practical Neurology.

[43]  M. Milkoreit Imaginary politics: Climate change and making the future , 2017 .

[44]  K. Killian,et al.  Ex Machina , 2015 .

[45]  David Jones,et al.  Colossus: the forbin project , 1967 .

[46]  Michael Reinsborough Science fiction and science futures: Considering the role of fictions in public engagement and science communication work , 2017 .

[47]  Mariarosaria Taddeo,et al.  The ethics of algorithms: Mapping the debate , 2016, Big Data Soc..

[48]  Helge Toutenburg,et al.  The Social Control of Technology , 1982 .

[49]  이명균,et al.  Frankenstein , 1995 .

[50]  Joachim Schummer,et al.  Teaching Societal and Ethical Implications of Nanotechnology to Engineering Students Through Science Fiction , 2005 .

[51]  W V Slack,et al.  When the machine stops. , 1992, M.D. computing : computers in medical practice.

[52]  Michael Grüninger,et al.  Introduction , 2002, CACM.

[53]  H. Cruz,et al.  The Epistemic Value of Speculative Fiction , 2015 .

[54]  R. Kitchin,et al.  Big Data, new epistemologies and paradigm shifts , 2014, Big Data Soc..

[55]  Philip Ball,et al.  The physical modelling of society: a historical perspective , 2002 .

[56]  Eric Gossett,et al.  Big Data: A Revolution That Will Transform How We Live, Work, and Think , 2015 .

[57]  Nils J. Nilsson,et al.  Artificial Intelligence , 1974, IFIP Congress.

[58]  S. Funtowicz,et al.  Science, Philosophy and Sustainability : The End of the Cartesian dream , 2015 .

[59]  Risto Karinen,et al.  Toward Anticipatory Governance: The Experience with Nanotechnology , 2009 .

[60]  Ray Quay,et al.  Anticipatory Governance , 2010 .