[11:15 - 11:27]
# 🏅
*Prism of Labour: Unsettling Knowledge, Skill, and Technology in Work Infrastructures*
Olivia Doggett; Jenna Myers; Matt Ratto; Priyank Chandra
Have you considered the capacity to detect hidden forms of labor—like unrecognized tasks (e.g., CAPTCHA labeling)—where AI systems profit without paying these workers?
[11:27 - 11:39]
*Revisiting Worker-Centered Design: Tensions, Blind Spots, and Action Spaces*
Shuhao Ma; John Zimmerman; Valentina Nisi; Nuno Jardim Nunes
Does your framework also have the capacity to identify and include those invisible laborers who contribute without even realizing they are laborers? Like training data work
[11:39 - 11:51]
# 🏅
*Thing Ethnography in a Factory: Exploring Emergent and Dynamic Relations of Cobots and Workers*
Hyungjun Cho; Jiyeon Amy Seo; Yongjae Sohn; Hee Rin Lee
In your intra-active approach, how is it determined who or what is included or excluded from the entanglement? And how do you think these agential cuts influence who holds responsibility or who remains invisible in the process?”
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[11:51 - 12:03]
*Hidden Labor behind the Hype: Understanding AI Side Hustles through Platform Narratives and Worker Practices*
Xiaoyu YANG; zelin zhao; Weipeng CHEN; Corey Kewei Xu; Pan Hui
How do you envision a concrete HCI design process that not only makes data training labor visible but actively resists its invisible exploitation?
[12:03 - 12:15]
*'The plan is just survival': Data Work in Kenya and the Regime of Entrapment*
Shivani Kapania; Tianling Yang; Nuredin Ali; Morgan Klaus Scheuerman; Milagros Miceli; Alex S Taylor; Sarah E Fox
How does your case study on data labor highlight unique characteristics that don’t apply to other gig contexts, and which aspects of your approach could be extended to other forms of gig economy work?
[12:15 - 12:27]
*The Domestic Operating System: An Empirical Investigation of Digital Technology and Hidden Work in the Home*
Sarah Lucy Frampton; Sandy J J Gould; Anna L Cox
Silvia Federici critiqued capitalism for hiding essential reproductive labor. Does your framework offer a lens that could illuminate or engage with such critiques?
[ 12:27 - 12:39]
*Labor, Capital, and Machine: Toward a Labor Process Theory for HCI*
Yigang Qin; EunJeong Cheon
Given that your work highlights the interplay of labor and capital, does your framework have mechanisms to identify unrecognized labor—such as hidden training labor—and the ways it is captured in production systems?