脸就是信息:黑箱城市中的算法治理政治

Gavin Smith
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引用次数: 1

摘要

日常监控工作越来越多地由非人类算法执行。这些实体可以被概念化为从事远程fl神经的机械fl神经:将城市流动置于冷静、计算和广阔的目光之下。本文对在澳大利亚城市达尔文和珀斯出现的算法实践的新生形式提供了一些理论反思,以及它们对城市关系和社会正义的一些影响。在考虑自动观看程序对“城市权”和“人脸权”等概念的影响之前,研究了自动观看程序的理想化和操作黑箱。它将认为,转向面部识别软件,以实现自动化城市治理,重构了面部的意义和现象学。特别是,面部的肉体和交流物理特性被简化为可测量的对象,可以通过虚拟参照物识别,然后随后跟踪。此外,这些识别的机器程序的不对称和无面性动摇了公民注意力不集中和身体主权的传统观念,模式识别的优先级使它们能够适应颅相学和面相学的思想/理想。通过这种方式,算法治理可能不仅会产生面部脆弱和疏远的形式,还会产生面部技巧,在这种情况下,个人会发展出默契和巧妙的去面对和重新面对的方式,以颠覆利用这些生物动力模式的识别过程。因此,城市治理的数据化产生了一种动态的生物政治面貌。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Face Is the Message: The Politics of Algorithmic Governance in the Black Box City
Everyday surveillance work is increasingly performed by non-human algorithms. These entities can be conceptualized as machinic flâneurs that engage in distanciated flânerie: subjecting urban flows to a dispassionate, calculative and expansive gaze. This paper provides some theoretical reflections on the nascent forms of algorithmic practice materializing in the Australian cities of Darwin and Perth, and some of their implications for urban relations and social justice. It looks at the idealization – and operational black boxing – of automated watching programs, before considering their impacts on notions such as ‘the right to the city’ and ‘the right to the face’. It will argue that the turn to facial recognition software for the purposes of automating urban governance reconstitutes the meanings and phenomenology of the face. In particular, the fleshly and communicative physicality of the face is reduced to a measurable object that can be identified by a virtualised referent and then consequently tracked. Moreover, the asymmetrical and faceless nature of these machinic programs of recognition unsettles conventional notions of civil inattention and bodily sovereignty, and the prioritization given to pattern recognition renders them amenable to ideas/ideals from phrenology and physiognomy. In this way, algorithmic governance may generate not only forms of facial vulnerability and estrangement, but also facial artifice, where individuals come to develop tacit and artful ways of de-facing and re-facing in order to subvert the processes of recognition which leverage these modes of bio-power. Thus, the datafication of urban governance gives rise to a dynamic bio-politics of the face.
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