References

  1. Alač, M., J. Movellan, and F. Tanaka. 2011. When a Robot Is Social: Spatial Arrangements and Multimodal Semiotic Engagement in the Practice of Social Robotics. Social Studies of Science 41 (6): 893–926.
  2. Alaimo, C., and J. Kallinikos. 2016. Encoding the Everyday: The Infrastructural Apparatus of Social Data. In Big Data Is Not a Monolith, ed. C. Sugimoto, H. Ekbia and M. Mattioli, 77–90. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
  3. Altieri, M. 1999. The Ecological Role of Biodiversity in Agroecosystems. Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment 74:19–31.
  4. André, P., H. Zhang, J. Kim, L. Chilton, S. Dow, and R. Miller. 2013. Community Clustering: Leveraging an Academic Crowd to Form Coherent Conference Sessions. Proceedings HCOMP '13, Palm Springs.
  5. Andrejevic, M. 2013. Estranged Free Labor. In Digital Labor: The Internet as Playground and Factory, ed. Trebor Scholz, 149–165. New York: Routledge.
  6. Andrejevic, M. 2015. Personal Data: Blind Spot of the “Affective Law of Value”? The Information Society 31 (1).
  7. Anglietta, M. 1979. A Theory of Capitalist Regulation. New Left Books.
  8. Arendt, H. 1958. The Human Condition. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press.
  9. Arrow, K. 1969. The Organization of Economic Activity: Issues Pertinent to the Choice of Market versus Nonmarket Allocation. In The Analysis and Evaluation of Public Expenditure: The PPB System. Vol. 1, US Joint Economic Committee, 91st Congress, 1st Session, Washington DC: US Government Printing Office, pp. 59–73.
  10. Arvidsson, A., and E. Colleoni. 2012. Value in informational capitalism and on the Internet. Information Society 28 (3): 135–150.
  11. Ashby, R. 1956. An Introduction to Cybernetics. London: Chapman and Hall.
  12. Assange, J. 2014. When Google Met WikiLeaks. New York: OR Books.
  13. Auger, J. 2014. Living with Robots: A Speculative Design Approach. Journal of Human—Robot Interaction 3 (1): 20–42.
  14. Autor, D. 2014. Skills, Education, and the Rise of Earnings Inequality among the “Other 99 Percent.” Science 344 (6186): 843–851.
  15. Babbage, C. 1832. On Machinery and Manufactures. London: Charles Knight.
  16. Bailey, D., E. Diniz, and D. Scholler. 2014. Achieving ICT4D Project Success by Altering Context, Not Technology. ICTD 10 (4): 15–29.
  17. Bailey, D., E. Diniz, B. Nardi, P. Leonardi, and D. Scholler. 2016. Multiplex Appropriation in Complex Systems Implementation: The Case of Brazil’s Correspondent Banking System. Management Information Systems Quarterly.
  18. Barabási, A. L. 2002. Linked: The New Science of Networks. New York: Perseus Books.
  19. Baumer, E., P. Adams, V. Khovanskaya, T. Liao, M. Smith, V. Sosik, and K. Williams. 2013. Limiting, Leaving, and (re)Lapsing: An Exploration of Facebook Non-Use Practices and Experiences. Proceedings of the ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computer Systems. Pp. 3257–3266.
  20. Baumer, E., and M. Silberman. 2011. When the Implication Is Not to Design (Technology). Proceedings of the ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computer Systems, 2271–2274.
  21. Beck, U. 1992. Risk Society: Towards a New Modernity. London: Sage.
  22. Becker, G. 1962. Irrational Action and Economic Theory. Journal of Political Economy 70 (1): 153–168.
  23. Becker, G. 1965. The Economic Approach to Human Behavior. Chicago: Chicago University Press.
  24. Becker, H. 1960. Notes on the Concept of Commitment. American Journal of Sociology 66 (1): 32–40.
  25. Becker, H. 2004. Interaction: Some Ideas. Paper presented at the Université Pierre Mendes-France, Grenoble. http://howardsbecker.com/articles/interaction.html.
  26. Beer, D. 2009. Power through the Algorithm? Participatory Web Cultures and the Technological Unconscious. New Media & Society 11 (6): 985–1002.
  27. Bejerot, N. 1974. The Six Day War in Stockholm. New Scientist 61 (886): 486–487.
  28. Bell, D. 1976. The Coming of Post-Industrial Society: A Venture in Social Forecasting. Harmondsworth: Penguin, Peregrine Books.
  29. Bellotti, V., S. Cambridge, K. Hoy, P. Shih, L. Handalian, K. Han, and J. Carroll. 2014. Towards Community-Centered Support for Peer-to-Peer Service Exchange: Rethinking the Timebanking Metaphor, 2975–2984. Proceedings NordiCHI.
  30. Beniger, J. 1986. The Control Revolution. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.
  31. Benkler, Y. 2002. Coase’s Penguin, or, Linux and The Nature of the Firm. Yale Law Journal 112:369–446.
  32. Benkler, Y. 2006. The Wealth of Networks: How Social Production Transforms Markets and Freedom. New Haven: Yale University Press.
  33. Berardi, F. 2009. The Soul at Work: From Alienation to Autonomy. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
  34. Blevis, Eli. 2007. Sustainable Interaction Design: Invention & Disposal, Renewal & Reuse. Proceedings of the ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computer Systems. Pp. 503–512.
  35. Boltanski, L., and È. Chiapello. 2005. The New Spirit of Capitalism. New York: Verso.
  36. Boltanski, L., and L. Thévenot. 2006. On Justification. The Economies of Worth. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
  37. Booth, D. 1998. The Environmental Consequences of Growth: Steady-state Economics as an Alternative to Ecological Decline. London: Routledge.
  38. Bradley, K. 2014. Towards a Peer Economy. In Green Utopianism, ed. K. Bradley and J. Hedrén, 183–204. New York: Routledge.
  39. Broekens, J., M. Heerink, and H. Rosendal. 2009. Assistive Social Robots in Elderly Care: A Review. Gerontechnology (Valkenswaard) 8 (2): 94–103.
  40. Brooks, R. 1999. Cambrian Intelligence: The Early History of the New AI. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
  41. Brown, W. 2015. Undoing the Demos. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
  42. Bruder, J. 2014. The End of Retirement: When You Can’t Afford to Stop Working. Harper’s Magazine, August. Pp. 28–36.
  43. Brynjarsdóttir, H., M. Håkansson, J. Pierce, E. Baumer, C. DiSalvo, and P. Sengers. 2012. Sustainably Unpersuaded: How Persuasion Narrows Our Vision of Sustainability. Proceedings of the ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computer Systems. Pp. 947–956.
  44. Brynjolfsson, E., and A. McAfee. 2011. Race Against the Machine. Digital Frontier Press.
  45. Brynjolfsson, E., and A. McAfee. 2016. The Second Machine Age. New York: W.W. Norton and Co.
  46. Buchanan, J. 1999. The Logical Foundations of Constitutional Liberty. New York: Liberty Fund.
  47. Buchsbaum, J. 2016. The Exceptional Intermittents du Spectacle. In The Routledge Companion to Labor and Media, ed. R. Maxwell, 154–169. New York: Routledge.
  48. Bullard, J. 2013. It Takes a Jerk to Make a Conversation into an Archive. Proceedings iConference. Pp. 583–588.
  49. Burawoy, M. 1979. Manufacturing Consent: Changes in the Labor Process Under Monopoly Capitalism. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
  50. Burdon, M., and M. Andrejevic. 2016. Big Data in the Sensor Society. In Big Data Is Not a Monolith, ed. C. Sugimoto, H. Ekbia and M. Mattioli, 51–75. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
  51. Burkett, P. 2003. The Value Problem in Ecological Economics: A Marxist Intervention. Historical Materialism 13 (1): 117–152.
  52. Bush, V. 1945. As We May Think. The Atlantic Monthly. http://www.ps.unisaarland.de/~duchier/pub/vbush/vbush.txt
  53. Caffentzis, G. 2005. Immeasurable Value? An Essay on Marx’s Legacy. The Commoner (10): 87–114.
  54. Caffentzis, G. 2013. In Letters of Blood and Fire. Oakland: PM Press.
  55. Callois, R. 1961. Man, Play, and Games. New York: Free Press.
  56. Campbell-Kelly, M., and W. Aspray. 1996. Computer: A History of the Information Machine. New York: Basic Books.
  57. Campbell-Kelly, M., W. Aspray, N. Ensmenger, and J. Yost. 2013. Computer: A History of the Information Machine. New York: Westview Press.
  58. Castells, M. 1989. The Rise of the Network Society. Malden, MA: Blackwell.
  59. Castells, M. 2009. Communication Power. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  60. Cerratto-Pargman, T., D. Pargman, and B. Nardi. 2016. The Internet at the Eco-Village: Performing Sustainability in the Twenty-First Century. First Monday 21 (5), May 2. http://firstmonday.org/ojs/index.php/fm/article/view/6637.
  61. Cervantes, R., M. Warschauer, B. Nardi, and S. Sambasivan. 2011. Infrastructures for Low-Cost Laptop Use in Mexican Schools. Proceedings of the ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computer Systems. Pp. 945–954.
  62. Chamayou, G. 2014. A Theory of the Drone. New York: The New Press.
  63. Chandler, A. 1980. The United States: Seedbed of Managerial Capitalism. In The Transformation of Industrial Organization: Management, Labor, and Society in the United States, ed. F. Hearn, 34–45. New York: Wadsworth.
  64. Chang, W.-L., S. Šabanović, and L. Huber. 2013. Situated Analysis of Interactions between Cognitively Impaired Older Adults and the Therapeutic Robot PARO. Proceedings ICSR 2013:371–380.
  65. Chang, W.-L., S. Šabanović, and L. Huber. 2014. Observational Study of Naturalistic Interactions with the Socially Assistive Robot PARO in a Nursing Home. Proceedings of RO-MAN’ 2014.
  66. Chilton, L., J. Horton, R. Miller, and S. Azenkot. 2010. Task Search in a Human Computation Market. Proceedings KDD-HCOMP.
  67. Choontanom, T., and B. Nardi. 2012. Theorycrafting: The Art and Science of Using Numbers to Interpret the World. In Games, Learning, and Society: Learning and Meaning in the Digital Age, ed. C. Steinkuehler, K. Squire and S. Barab. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  68. Coase, R. 1960. The Problem of Social Cost. Journal of Law & Economics 3:1–44.
  69. Cohen, S. 1973. Folk Devils and Moral Panics. London: St. Albans.
  70. Comor, E. 2015. Revisiting Marx’s Value Theory: A Critical Response to Analyses of Digital Prosumption. Information Society 31 (1): 13–19.
  71. Conaty, P., and D. Bollier. 2014. Toward an Open-Cooperativism: A New Social Economy Based on Open Platforms, Co-operative Models and the Commons. A Report on a Commons Strategies Group Workshop. Berlin, Germany August 27–28.
  72. Cornwall, A. 2008. Unpacking “Participation”: Models, Meanings and Practices. Community Development Journal 43 (3): 269–283.
  73. Croll, A. 2013. Big Data Is Our Generation’s Civil Rights Issue, and We Don’t Know It. http://radar.oreilly.com/2012/08/big-data-is-our-generations-civil-rights-issue-and-we-dont-know-it.html.
  74. CUSLAR. 2014. The Hardships and Dehumanizing Struggles of a Globalized Immigrant Population. http://cuslar.org/2014/03/06/the-hardships-and-dehumanizing-struggles-of-a-globalized-immigrant-population.
  75. Daft, R. 2001. Organization Theory and Design. 7th ed. Cincinnati: South-Western College Publishing.
  76. Daly, H. 1991. Steady State Economics. Washington, DC: Island Press.
  77. De Brunhoff, S. 2005. Marx’s Contribution to the Search for a Theory of Money. In Marx’s Theory of Money: Modern Appraisals, ed. F. Mosele, 209–221. London: Palgrave Macmillan.
  78. Deleuze, G. 1992. Postscript on the Societies of Control. Originally published in the journal OCTOBER 59, Winter 1992, 3–7. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
  79. Dertouzos, M. 1979. Individualized Automation. The Computer Age: A Twenty-Year View, eds. M. Dertouzos and J. Moses, 38–55. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
  80. De Stefano, V. 2016. The Rise of the “Just-In-Time Workforce”: On-Demand Work, Crowdwork and Labour Protection in the “Gig-Economy.” Comparative Labor Law & Policy Journal 37 (3).
  81. Dewey, J. 2005. Art as Experience. New York: Perigee. (First published 1934.)
  82. Dillahunt, T. 2014) Toward a Deeper Understanding of Sustainability within HCI. Proceedings of the ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computer Systems, Extended Abstracts.
  83. Diniz, E. 2007. Correspondent Banking and Microcredit in Brazil: Banking Technology and the Expansion of Financial Services for the Low Income Population. São Paulo: GVPesquisa Report.
  84. Diniz, E., D. Bailey, S. Dailey, and D. Sholler. 2013. Bridging the ICT4D Design-Actuality Gap: “Human ATMs” and the Provision of Financial Services for “Humble People.” International Conference on Information Resources Management 2013. Natal, Brazil.
  85. Dunne, A., and F. Raby. 2013. Speculative Everything: Design, Fiction, and Social Dreaming. Cambridge: MIT Press.
  86. Dyer-Witheford, N. 1999. Cyber-Marx. Urbana: University of Illinois Press.
  87. Employee Benefit Research Institute. 2005. History of 401(k) Plans: An Update. http://www.ebri.org/pdf/publications/facts/0205fact.a.pdf.
  88. Ekbia, H. R. 2008. Artificial Dreams: The Quest for Non-Biological Intelligence. New York: Cambridge University Press.
  89. Ekbia, H. R. 2009. Digital Artifacts as Quasi-Objects: Qualification, Mediation, and Materiality. Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology 60 (12): 2554–2566.
  90. Ekbia, H. R. 2012. Heteronomous Humans and Autonomous Agents: Toward Artificial Relational Intelligence. In Beyond Artificial Intelligence: The Disappearing Human-Machine Divide: Topics in Intelligent Engineering and Informatics. vol. 9. Ed. J. Fodor and I. Ruda, 63–78. Heidelberg: Springer.
  91. Ekbia, H. R. 2016. Digital Inclusion and Social Exclusion: The Political Economy of Value in a Networked World. Information Society.
  92. Ekbia, H. R., and B. Nardi. 2012. Inverse Instrumentality: How Technologies Objectify Patients and Players. In Materiality and Organizing: Social Interaction in a Technological World, ed. P. Leonardi, B. Nardi and J. Kallinikos, 157–176. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  93. Ekbia, H. R. and Nardi, B. 2014. Heteromation and Its (Dis)contents: The Invisible Division of Labor between Humans and Machines. First Monday, June.
  94. Ekbia, H. R., and B. Nardi. 2015. The Political Economy of Computing: The Elephant in the HCI Room. Interactions, 46–49. New York: ACM Press.
  95. Ekbia, H. R., and B. Nardi. 2016. Social Inequality and HCI: The View from Political Economy. Proceedings of the ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computer Systems. New York: ACM Press.
  96. Ekbia, H. R., Nardi, B. and Šabanović, S. 2015. On the Margins of the Machine: Heteromation and Robotics. Proceedings iConference.
  97. Elgin, D., and A. Mitchell. 1977. Voluntary Simplicity. The Co-Evolution Quarterly, Summer. http://www.duaneelgin.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/11/voluntary_simplicity.pdf.
  98. Emirbayer, M., and A. Mische. 1998. What Is Agency? American Journal of Sociology 103:962–1023.
  99. Engelbart, D. 1962. Augmenting Human Intellect: A Conceptual Framework. Research Report. DougEngelbart.org.
  100. Etzioni, A. 1988. The Moral Dimension: Toward a New Economics. New York: The Free Press.
  101. Facebook. 2012. Registration Statement. United States Securities And Exchange Commission, Washington, D.C. https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1326801/000119312512034517/d287954ds1.htm.
  102. Federici, S. 2012. Wages against Housework. In Revolution at Point Zero: Housework, Reproduction, and Feminist Struggle. Oakland: PM Press/Common Notions. (Originally published in The Politics of Housework, E. Malos, ed. London: Allison and Busby, 1982.)
  103. Ferguson, R. A. 2013. Alone in America: The Stories that Matter. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
  104. Ferguson, R. S., and S. Lovell. 2014. Permaculture for Agroecology: Design, Movement, Practice, and Worldview: A Review. Agronomy for Sustainable Development 34 (2): 251–274.
  105. Fisher, D., and M. Fisher. 1996. Tube: The Invention of Television. Washington, DC: Counterpoint.
  106. Forbes. 2013. The World’s Billionaires List. www.forbes.com/billionaires/list.
  107. Forlizzi, J., and C. DiSalvo. 2006. Service Robots in the Domestic Environment: A Study of the Roomba VACUUM in the home. Proceedings of the ACM SIGCHI/SIGART Conference on Human-RobotInteraction (HRI).
  108. Forte, A., V. Larco, and A. Bruckman. 2009. Decentralization in Wikipedia Governance. Journal of Management Information Systems 26 (1): 49–72.
  109. Foster, J. 2002. Ecology Against Capitalism. New York: Monthly Review Press.
  110. Foucault, M. 1977. Discipline and Punish. Trans. R. Howard. New York: Vintage Books.
  111. Foucault, M. 1986. Space, Knowledge, and Power. In The Foucault Reader, ed. P. Rabinow. Harmondsworth: Penguin.
  112. Foucault, M. 1991. Why This Prison? In The Foucault Effect: Studies in Governmentality, ed. G. Burchell, C. Gordon and P. Miller. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
  113. Foucault, M. 1997. Ethics: Subjectivity and Truth, ed. Paul Rabinow. New York: The New Press.
  114. Foucault, M. 2008. The Government of Self and Others: Lectures at the College de France 1982–83. New York: Macmillan.
  115. Fox, J. 2015. Rice Gets a Bath Amid California’s Drought. Bloomberg View, May 15. http://www.bloombergview.com/articles/2015-05-15/california-floods-fields-to-grow-rice-in-a-drought.
  116. Franklin, B. (1748). Advice to a Young Tradesman, Written by an Old One.
  117. Freire, P. 2002. Pedagogy of the Oppressed. New York: Continuum. (First published 1970.)
  118. Friedman, M. 1953. Essays in Positive Economics. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
  119. Friedman, M. 1962. Capitalism and Freedom. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
  120. Friedman, T. 2005. The World Is Flat: A Brief History of the Twenty-First Century. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux.
  121. Fuchs, C. 2011. An Alternative View of Privacy on Facebook. Information 2:140–165.
  122. Fuchs. C. 2012. With or without Marx? With or without capitalism? A rejoinder to Adam Arvidsson and Eleanor Colleoni. TripleC 10 (2):633–645.
  123. Fuchs, C., and S. Sevignani. 2013. What Is Digital Labour? What Is Digital Work? What’s Their Difference? And Why Do These Questions Matter for Understanding Social Media? tripleC: Communication, Capitalism & Critique. Open Access Journal for a Global Sustainable Information Society 1:237–293.
  124. Galbraith, J. K. 1985. The Economics of Innocent Fraud: Truth for Our Time. New York: Allen Lane.
  125. Gassée, J.-L. 1987. The Third Apple: Personal Computers and the Cultural Revolution. New York: Harcourt.
  126. Gates, B. 2007. A Robot in Every Home. Scientific American (January): 58–65.
  127. Georgescu-Roegen, N. 1971. The Entropy Law and the Economic Process. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
  128. Giddens, A. 1990. The Consequences of Modernity. Cambridge: Polity.
  129. Gizmodo 2013. Google Finally Puts CAPTCHAS to Good Use. http://gizmodo.com/5897661/google-finally-puts-captchas-to-good-use.
  130. Golding, D. 2015. The End of Gamers. In State of Play, ed. D. Goldberg and L. Larsson, 127–140. New York: Seven Stories.
  131. Gordon, R. 2012. Is U.S. Economic Growth Over? Faltering Innovation Confronts the Six Headwinds. NBER Working Paper 18315. http://www.nber.org/papers/w18315.
  132. Gorz, A. 1985. Paths to Paradise. New York: South End Press.
  133. Gramsci, A. 1971. Selections from the Prison Notebooks. New York: International Publishers.
  134. Greenspan, A. 1996. The Challenge of Central Banking in a Democratic Society, December 5. http://www.federalreserve.gov/boarddocs/speeches/1996/19961205.htm.
  135. Grudin, J. 2012. A Moving Target: The Evolution of HCI. In Human-computer Interaction Handbook: Fundamentals, Evolving Technologies, and Emerging Applications. 3rd ed., ed. J. Jacko. London: Taylor & Francis.
  136. Gui, X., and B. Nardi. 2015. Sustainability Begins in the Street: A Story of Transition Town Totnes. Proceedings ICT4S.
  137. Håkansson, M., and P. Sengers. 2013. Beyond Being Green: Simple Living Families and ICT. Proceedings of the ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computer Systems. Pp. 2725–2734.
  138. Harvey, D. 1999. The Limits to Capital. London: Verso.
  139. Harvey, D. 2010. The Enigma of Capital. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  140. Haushofer, J., and E. Fehr. 2014. Science 344 (6186): 862–867. doi: 10.1126/science.1232491.
  141. Hayden-Smith, R. 2014. Sowing the Seeds of Victory: American Gardening Programs of World War 1. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland.
  142. Heidegger, M. 1962. Being and Time. New York: Harper and Row. (First published 1927.)
  143. Heidegger, M. 1977. The Question Concerning Technology and Other Essays. New York: Harper and Row. (First published 1954.)
  144. Hellman, M., T. Schoenmakers, B. Nordstrom, and R. van Holst. 2013. Is There Such a Thing as Online Video Game Addiction? A Cross-Disciplinary Review. Addiction Research and Theory 21 (2): 102–112.
  145. Hobsbawm, E. 1999. Industry and Empire: The Birth of the Industrial Revolution. New York: New Press. (First published 1968.)
  146. Hodson, H. 2013. Crowdsourcing Grows Up as Online Workers Unite. New Scientist. https://www.newscientist.com/article/mg21729036-200-crowdsourcing-grows-up-as-online-workers-unite.
  147. Hofstadter, D. 1979. Gödel, Escher, Bach: An Eternal Golden Braid. New York: Basic Books.
  148. Holmes, B. 2002. The Flexible Personality: For a New Cultural Critique. European Institute for Progressive Cultural Policies. http://eipcp.net/transversal/1106/holmes/en.
  149. Holmes, B. 2005. Interview. Journal of Aesthetics & Protest. http://asounder.org/resources/holmes_flexiblepersonality.pdf.
  150. Hornborg, A. 2001. The Power of the Machine. Walnut Creek, CA: Altamira Press.
  151. Hornborg, A. 2014. Why Solar Panels Don’t Grow on Trees. In Green Utopianism, ed. K. Bradley and J. Hedrén, 76–97. New York: Routledge.
  152. Horton, J., and L. Chilton. 2010. The Labor Economics of Paid Crowdsourcing. Paper presented at the ACM Conference on Electronic Commerce, Boston, MA.
  153. Hospitality Industry. 2009. Self-Service: The Next Generation. Self-Service Technology Study.
  154. Hospitality Industry. 2011. Self-Service Tech Study.
  155. Howard, J. 1969. The Flowering of the Hippie Movement. Protest in the Sixties (March): 43–55. Vol. 382 of Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science.
  156. Huff, D. 1954. How to Lie with Statistics. New York: Norton.
  157. Huffman, M. 2014. From Healthcare to Hamburgers, It's a Self-Service World. http://www.consumeraffairs.com/news/from-healthcare-to-hamburgers-its-a-self-service-world-100114.html.
  158. Huizinga, J. 1950. Homo Ludens: A Study of the Play Element in Culture. Boston: Beacon Press.
  159. Huntemann, N. 2014. No More Excuses: Using Twitter to Challenge The Symbolic Annihilation of Women in Games. Feminist Media Studies 15 (1): 164–167.
  160. Hüttenraunch, H., A. Green, M. Norman, L. Oestreicher, and K. Severinson Eklundh. 2004. Involving Users in the Design of a Mobile Office Robot. IEEE Transactions on Systems, Man and Cybernetics. Part C, Applications and Reviews 34 (2): 113–124.
  161. Huws, U. 2003. The Making of a Cyberteriat: Virtual Work in a Real World. New York: Monthly Review Press.
  162. Inoue, K., K. Wada, and Y. Ito. 2008. Effective Application of Paro: Seal Type Robots for Disabled People in According to Ideas of Occupational Therapists. Paper presented at the Computers Helping People with Special Needs Conference.
  163. IPCC. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. 2014. Climate Change 2013: The Physical Science Basis. Working Group I Contribution to the Fifth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, eds. T. Stocker, D. Qin, G.-K. Plattner, M. Tignor, S. Allen, J. Boschung, A. Nauels, Y. Xia, V. Bex, and P. Midgley. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  164. Irani, L. 2013. The Cultural Work of Microwork. New Media & Society 17 (5): 720–739.
  165. Irani, L., and S. Silberman. 2013. Turkopticon: Interrupting Worker Invisibility in Amazon Mechanical Turk. Proceedings of the ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computer Systems. Pp. 16–21.
  166. Jackson, S. 2014. Rethinking Repair. In Media Technologies, ed. T. Gillespie, et al. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
  167. Jameson, F. 2011. Representing Capital: A Reading of Volume One. New York: Verso.
  168. Jamieson, K., and J. Cappella. 2008. Echo Chamber: Rush Limbaugh and the Conservative Media Establishment. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  169. Jenkins, H. 2006. Fans, Bloggers, and Gamers: Media Consumers in the Digital Age. New York: NYU Press.
  170. Jiang, L., C. Wagner, and B. Nardi. 2015. Not Just in It for the Money: A Qualitative Investigation of Workers’ Perceived Benefits of Micro-task Crowdsourcing. Proceedings HICSS:773–782.
  171. John, N. A. 2012. The Social Logics of Sharing: Web 2.0, Sharing Economies and the Therapeutic Narrative. In Cultures and Ethics of Sharing/Kulturen und Ethiken des Teilens, eds. T. Hug, R. Maier, and F. Stalder. Innsbruck: Innsbruck University Press.
  172. Joshi, S., and T. Cerrato Pargman. 2015. On Fairness & Sustainability: Motivating Change in the Networked Society. Proceedings ICT4S.
  173. Kaldor, N. 1962. Capital Accumulation and Economic Growth. United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization. Seminar on the Programming of Economic Development. Sao Paolo.
  174. Kallinikos, J. 2004. Farewell to Constructivism: Technology and Context-Embedded Action. In The Social Study of Information and Communication Technology, ed. C. Avgerou, C. Ciborra and F. Land, 140–161. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  175. Kallinikos, J. 2011. Governing through Technology: Information Artefacts and Social Practice. London: Palgrave Macmillan.
  176. Kallinikos, J., A. Aaltonen, and A. Marton. 2013. The Ambivalent Ontology of Digital Artifacts. MIS Quarterly, 37 (2): 357–370.
  177. Kanda, T., R. Sato, N. Saiwaki, and H. Ishiguro. 2007. A Two-Month Field Trial in an Elementary School for Long-Term Human-Robot Interaction. IEEE Transactions on Robotics 23 (5): 962–971.
  178. Kanda, T., M. Shiomi, Z. Miyashita, H. Ishiguro, and N. Hagita. 2009. An Affective Guide Robot in a Shopping Mall. Proceedings of the ACM/IEEE International Conference on Human-Robot Interaction (HRI).
  179. Kaptelinin, V. 2014. Crafting User Experience of Self-Service Technologies: Key Challenges and Potential Solutions. Proceedings DIS (Design of Interactive Systems). Workshop paper.
  180. Kaptelinin, V., and B. Nardi. 2006. Acting with Technology: Activity Theory and Interaction Design. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
  181. Karabell, Z. 2015. The Uberization of Money. Wall Street Journal. http://www.wsj.com/articles/the-uberization-of-finance-1446835102.
  182. Kessler, S. 2015. Why a New Generation of On-Demand Businesses Rejected the Uber Model. Fast Company. http://www.fastcompany.com/3058299/why-a-new-generation-of-on-demand-businesses-rejected-the-uber-model.
  183. Kiesler, S., J. Siegel, and T. McGuire. 1984. Social Psychological Aspects of Computer-Mediated Communication. American Psychologist 39:1123–1134.
  184. King, J. L., S. Iacono, and J. Grudin. 2004. Going Critical: Perspective and Proportion in the Epistemology of Rob Kling. The Information Society, 23 (4): 251–262.
  185. Kirkpatrick, D. 2010. The Facebook Effect: The Inside Story of the Company that is Connecting the World. New York: Simon and Schuster.
  186. Kirman, B., S. Lawson, J. Linehan, and D. O’Hara. 2013. CHI and the Future Robot Enslavement of Humankind: A Retrospective. Proceedings of the ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computer Systems. Pp. 2199–2208.
  187. Klein, N. 2014. This Changes Everything: Capitalism vs. the Climate. New York: Simon and Schuster.
  188. Kling, R., ed. 1996. Computerization and Controversy: Value Conflicts and Social Choices. San Diego: Academic Press.
  189. Knoblauch, W. 2015. Game Over?: A Cold War Kid Reflects on Apocalyptic Video Games. In State of Play, ed. D. Goldberg and L. Larsson, 188–210. New York: Seven Stories.
  190. Knowles, B., L. Blair, M. Hazas, and S. Walker. 2013. Exploring Sustainability Research in Computing. Proceedings Ubicomp 13:305–314.
  191. Knowles, B., M. Lochrie, P. Coulton, and J. Whittle. 2014. Barter: A Technology Strategy for Local Wealth Generation. IT Professional 16 (3): 28–34.
  192. Körner, A., M. Reitzle, and R. Silbereisen. 2012. Work-Related Demands and Life Satisfaction. Journal of Vocational Behavior 80:187–196.
  193. Kou, Y., and B. Nardi. 2013. Regulating Anti-Social Behavior on the Inter­net: The Example of League of Legends. Proceedings of the iConference. Pp. 616–622.
  194. Kou, Y., and B. Nardi. 2014. Governance in League of Legends: A Hybrid System. Proceedings Foundations of Digital Games.
  195. Kow, Y., and B. Nardi. 2009. Culture and Creativity: World of Warcraft Modding in China and the U.S. In Online Worlds: Convergence of the Real and the Virtual, ed. W. S. Bainbridge. Heidelberg: Springer.
  196. Kow, Y. M., and B. Nardi eds. 2010a. User Creativity, Governance and the New Media. First Monday, May.
  197. Kow, Y. M. and Nardi, B. 2010b. Who Owns the Mods? First Monday, May.
  198. Kow, Y. M., and B. Nardi. 2012. Mediating Contradictions of Digital Media. UCI Law Review 2:675–692.
  199. Kow, Y. M., and B. Nardi. 2014. Rethinking Participatory Culture: Lessons from Core Teams in China. In Videogames and Virtual Realities in East Asia, ed. D. Wong and W. Kelly. London: Routledge.
  200. Kücklich, J. 2005. Precarious Playbour: Modders and the Digital Games Industry. Fibreculture 5.
  201. Kunda, G., S. Barley, and J. Evans. 2002. Why Do Contractors Contract? The Experience of Highly Skilled Technical Professionals in a Contingent Labor Market. Industrial & Labor Relations Review 55:234–261.
  202. Kumar, A., A. Nair, A. Parsons, and E. Urdapilleta. 2006. Expanding Bank Outreach through Retail Partnerships: Correspondent Banking In Brazil. Washington: World Bank Working Paper No. 85.
  203. Kurzweil, R. 1999. The Age of Spiritual Machines. New York: Viking.
  204. Laney, D. 2012. To Facebook, You're Worth $80.95. CIO Journal: Wall Street Journal Blogs, May 3. http://blogs.wsj.com/cio/2012/05/03/to-facebook-youre-worth-80-95.
  205. Langlois, R. 2003. Cognitive Comparative Advantage and the Organization of Work: Lessons from Herbert Simon’s Vision of the Future. Journal of Economic Psychology 24:167–187.
  206. Langlois, R. 2007. The Dynamics of Industrial Capitalism: Schumpeter, Chandler, and the New Economy. London: Routledge.
  207. Lash, S., and J. Urry. 1987. The End of Organized Capitalism. Cambridge: Polity.
  208. LaToza, T., A. Di Lecce, F. Ricci, B. Towne, and A. van der Hoek. 2015. Ask the Crowd: Scaffolding Coordination and Knowledge Sharing in Microtask Programming. Proceedings VL/HCC. Pp. 23–27.
  209. Lentejas, R. 2013. 5 Benefits Businesses Can Get from Consumer Product Reviews. Postsckrippt, February 28. http://www.postsckrippt.ca/5-benefits-businesses-consumer-product-reviews.
  210. Leontiev, A. 1978. Activity, Consciousness, and Personality. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall. (Originally published in Russian, 1975.)
  211. Letts, G. 2013. The Top 10 Benefits of Customer Feedback. Customersure, July 12. http://www.customersure.com/blog/top-10-benefits-of-customer-feedback.
  212. Levinson, S., and N. Enfield. 2006. Roots of Human Sociality: Culture, Cognition, and Interaction. London: Berg Publishers.
  213. Licklider, J. C. R. 1960. Man-Computer Symbiosis. IRE Transactions on Human Factors in Electronics HFE-1:4–11.
  214. Maestri, L. and Wakkary, R. 2011. Understanding Repair as a Creative Process of Everyday Design. Creativity and Cognition: 81–90.
  215. MacKenzie, D. n.d. Is Economic Performative?: Option Theory and the Con­struction of Derivatives Markets. http://www.lse.ac.uk/accounting/CARR/pdf/MacKenzie.pdf.
  216. Major, N., and B. Nardi. (in preparation). The Quest for Authenticity. Amateur Content Creators and YouTube.
  217. Manjoo, Farhad. 2015. Uber's Business Model Could Change Your Work, New York Times, January 28. http://www.nytimes.com/2015/01/29/technology/personaltech/uber-a-rising-business-model.html
  218. Marazzi, C. 2007. Capital and Affects: The Politics of the Language Economy. Los Angeles: Semiotext(e).
  219. Marcuse, H. 1964. One-Dimensional Man. Boston: Beacon Press.
  220. Marshall, A. 1890. The Principles of Economics. Macmillan and Co.
  221. Martin, D., B. Hanrahan, J. O’Neill, and N. Gupta. 2014. Being a Turker. Proceedings CSCW 14:224–235.
  222. Marx, K. 1844. Economic and Philosophical Manuscripts.
  223. Marx, K. 1939/1993. Grundrisse: Foundations of the Critique of Political Economy. New York: Penguin Classics.
  224. Marx, K. 1990. Vol. I. Capital: A Critique of Political Economy. New York: Penguin Classics.
  225. Maxwell, R., ed. 2016. The Routledge Companion to Labor and Media. New York: Routledge.
  226. McChesney, R. 2013. Digital Disconnect: How Capitalism is Turning the Internet Against Democracy. New York: The New Press.
  227. McCloskey, D. 2009. The Anti-Materialist Project of “The Bourgeois Era.” https://mpra.ub.uni-muenchen.de/17411/1/MPRA_paper_17411.pdf.
  228. McCullagh, D. 2010. Why No One Cares about Privacy Anymore? CNET.com, March 12. https://www.cnet.com/news/why-no-one-cares-about-privacy-anymore.
  229. Michelucci, P. 2013. Synthesis and Taxonomy of Human Computation. In Handbook of Human Computation, ed. P. Michelucci, 83–86. New York: Springer.
  230. Miller, P., and N. Rose. 2008. Governing the Present. London: Polity Press.
  231. Mirowski, P. 2002. Machine Dreams: Economics Becomes a Cyborg Science. New York: Cambridge University Press.
  232. Morozov, E. 2011. The Net Delusion: The Dark Side of Internet Freedom. New York: Public Affairs.
  233. Moshenska, G. 2007. Unearthing an Air-Raid Shelter at Edgeware Junior School. London Archaeologist 11 (9): 237–240.
  234. Murthy, D. 2012. Towards a Sociological Understanding of Social Media: Theorizing Twitter. Sociology 46 (6): 1059–1073.
  235. Mutlu, B., and J. Forlizzi. 2008. Robots in Organizations: The Role of Workflow. Social and Environmental Factors in Human-Robot Interaction. Proceedings of the ACM/IEEE International Conference on Human-Robot Interaction (HRI).
  236. Nardi, B. 1993. A Small Matter of Programming: Perspectives on End User Computing. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
  237. Nardi, B. 2010. My Life as a Night Elf Priest: An Anthropological Account of World of Warcraft. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.
  238. Nardi, B. 2013. The Role of Human Computation in Sustainability, or, Social Progress Is Made of Fossil Fuels. In Handbook of Human Computation. New York: Springer.
  239. Nardi, B. 2015. Inequality and Limits. Special issue “Computing within LIMITS.” First Monday, August.
  240. Nardi, B., and J. Miller. 1991. Twinkling Lights and Nested Loops: Distributed Problem Solving and Spreadsheet Development. International Journal of Man-Machine Studies 34:161–184.
  241. Nardi, B., and V. O’Day. 2000. Information Ecologies: Using Technology with Heart. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
  242. Nardi, B., D. Schiano, and M. Gumbrecht. 2004. Blogging as Social Activity, or, Would You Let 900 Million People Read Your Diary? Proceedings Conference on Computer-Supported Cooperative Work. New York: ACM Press.
  243. Nardi, B., S. Whittaker, and H. Schwarz. 2002. NetWORKers and Their Activity in Intensional Networks. Computer Supported Cooperative Work 11:205–242.
  244. Nathan, L. 2008. Ecovillages, Values, and Information Technology: Balancing Sustainability with Daily Life in 21st Century America. Proceedings of the ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computer Systems, Extended Abstracts. Pp. 3723–3728.
  245. Neff, G. 2012. Venture Labor: Work and the Burden of Risk in Innovative Industries. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
  246. North, D. 1990. Institutions, Institutional Change and Economic Performance. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  247. O’Connor, S. 2013a. Amazon's Human Robots. Daily Mail, February 28. http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2286227/Amazons-human-robots-Is-future-British-workplace.html.
  248. O’Connor, S. 2013b. Amazon Unpacked. Financial Times, February 8. https://www.ft.com/content/ed6a985c-70bd-11e2-85d0-00144feab49a.
  249. Ohm, P., and Peppet, S. 2016. What If Everything Reveals Everything. In Big Data Is Not a Monolith, eds. C. Sugimoto, H. Ekbia, and M. Mattioli. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
  250. O’Malley, Pat. 1992. Risk, Power and Crime Prevention. Economy and Society 21:252–275.
  251. O’Reilly, T. 2005. What Is Web 2.0: Design Patterns and Business Models for the Next Generation of Software. O’Reilly.com http://oreillynet.com/1pt/a/6228.
  252. Oxfam 2016. 62 People Own the Same as Half the World, Reveals Oxfam Davos Report. https://www.oxfam.org/en/pressroom/pressreleases/2016-01-18/62-people-own-same-half-world-reveals-oxfam-davos-report.
  253. Packard, V. 1960. The Waste Makers. New York: David Mackay Company.
  254. Paolacci, G., and J. Chandler. 2014. Inside the Turk: Understanding Mechanical Turk as a Participant Pool. Current Directions in Psychological Science 23 (3): 184–188.
  255. Pargman, D., and B. Raghavan. 2015. Introduction to LIMITS '15: First Workshop on Computing within Limits. First Monday, August.
  256. Patterson, D. 2015. Haitian Resiliency: A Case Study in Intermittent Infrastructure. First Monday, August.
  257. Paul, C. 2011. Optimizing Play: How Theorycraft Changes Gameplay and Design. Games and Culture 11 (2).
  258. Penny, S. 2016. The Elephants in the (Server) Room: Sustainability and Surveillance in the Era of Big Data. In Ubiquitous Computing, Complexity and Culture, eds. U. Ekman, et al. New York: Routledge.
  259. Perry, S., and N. Beale. 2015. The Social Web and Archaeology’s Restructuring: Impact, Exploitation, Disciplinary Change. Open Archaeology 1:153–165.
  260. Petcou, C., and D. Petrescu. 2014. R-urban: Strategies and Tactics for Participative Utopias and Resilient Practices. Green Utopianism: Perspectives, Politics and Micro-Practices, eds. K. Bradley and J. Hedrén. Routledge.
  261. Peters, T. 1992. Liberation Management. New York: Alfred A. Knopf.
  262. Peterson, V. 2005. How (the Meaning of) Gender Matters in Political Economy. New Political Economy 10 (4): 499–521.
  263. Pierce, J. 2012. Undesigning Technology: Considering the Negation of Design by Design. Proceedings of the ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computer Systems. Pp. 957–966.
  264. Piketty, T. 2014. Capital in the Twenty-First Century. Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press.
  265. Pinch, T. 2010. Presidential Address, Annual Meeting of the Society for the Social Studies of Science. Tokyo, Japan.
  266. Pinker, S. 2007. The Language Instinct. New York: Harper Perennial Modern Classics.
  267. Podolny, S. 2015. If an Algorithm Wrote This, How Would You Even Know? New York Times, March 7.
  268. Polanyi, M. 1949. The Great Transformation: The Political and Economic Origins of Our Time. New York: Beacon Press.
  269. Postigo, H. 2003. From Pong to Planet Quake: Post Industrial Transitions from Leisure to Work. Information Communication and Society 6 (4): 593–607.
  270. Postigo, H. 2010. Modding to the Big Leagues: Exploring the Space between Modders and the Game Industry. First Monday, May.
  271. Proffitt, J., H. R. Ekbia, and S. McDowell. 2015. Introduction to the Special Forum on Monetization of User-Generated Content—Marx Revisited. Information Society 31 (1): 1–4.
  272. Qaurooni, D., A. Ghazinejad, I. Kouper, and H. R. Ekbia. 2016. Citizens for Science and Science for Citizens: The View from Participatory Design. Proceedings of the ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computer Systems.
  273. Raghavan, R., and S. Hasan. 2012. Macroscopically Sustainable Networking: An Internet Quine. ICSI Technical Report, September. Berkeley: ICSI.
  274. Raghavan, B., B. Nardi, S. Lovell, J. Norton, B. Tomlinson, and D. Patterson, 2016. Computational Agroecology: Sustainable Food Ecosystem Design. Proceedings CHI’2016.
  275. Raval, N., and P. Dourish. 2016. Standing Out from the Crowd: Emotional Labor, Body Labor, and Temporal Labor in Ridesharing. Proceedings CSCW:97–107.
  276. Ratto, M. 2011. Critical Making: Conceptual and Material Studies in Technology and Social Life. Information Society 27 (4): 252–260.
  277. Reich, R. 2015. The Sharing Economy Is Hurtling Us Backwards. Salon, February 4. http://www.salon.com/2015/02/04/robert_reich_the_sharing_economy_is_hurtling_us_backwards_partner.
  278. Remy, C., and E. Huang. 2014. Addressing the Obsolescence of End-User Devices: Approaches from the Field of Sustainable HCI. In ICT Innovations for Sustainability. New York: Springer.
  279. Rheingold, H. 2000. The Virtual Community: Homesteading on the Electronic Frontier. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
  280. Rifkin, J. 1995. The End of Work. New York: Putnam.
  281. Rifkin, J. 2000. The Age of Access: The New Culture of Hypercapitalism. New York: Tarcher/Putnam.
  282. Rifkin, J. 2014. The Zero Marginal Cost Society. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.
  283. Ritzer, G., and N. Jurgenson. 2010. Production, Consumption, Prosumption: The Nature of Capitalism in the Age of the Digital “Prosumer.” Journal of Consumer Culture 10 (1): 13–36.
  284. Robertson, M. 2012. Measurement and Alienation: Making a World of Ecosystem Services. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers 37 (3): 386–401.
  285. Robinson, B. 2015. With a Different Marx: Value and the Contradictions of Web 2.0 Capitalism. Information Society 31 (1): 44–51.
  286. Robinson, M. 1980. Housekeeping. New York: Farrar, Straus, and Giroux.
  287. Rooney, B. 2014. The FedEx Driver Who Sued and Won. CNN Money, November 21. http://money.cnn.com/2014/11/20/news/companies/fedex-driver-lawsuit.
  288. Rose, N., and J. Abi-Rached. 2013. Neuro: The New Brain Sciences and the Management of the Mind. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
  289. Saez, E., and G. Zucman. 2014. Wealth Inequality in the United States since 1913. http://gabriel-zucman.eu/files/SaezZucman2014Slides.pdf.
  290. Schiano, D. 1999. Lessons from Lambda Moo. Presence 8 (2): 127–139.
  291. Schiller, D. 1999. Digital Capitalism. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
  292. Schiller, D. 2014. Digital Depresssion: Information Technology and Economic Crisis. Urbana: University of Illinois Press.
  293. Schmidt, E., and J. Cohen. 2014. The New Digital Age: Reshaping the Future of People, Nations, and Business. New York: Vintage Books.
  294. Schmidt, F. 2013a. For a Few Dollars More: Class Action Against Crowdsourcing. #BWPWAP 2.1. http://www.aprja.net/?p=836.
  295. Schmidt, F. 2013b. The Good, the Bad and the Ugly. IEEE Workshop Cloud and Green Computing. http://florianschmidt.co/the-good-the-bad-and-the-ugly.
  296. Scholz, T. 2013. Digital Labour: The Internet as Playground and Factory. New York: Routledge.
  297. Schumacher, E. F. 1973. Small Is Beautiful: A Study of Economics As If People Mattered. London: Blond and Briggs.
  298. Schumpeter, J. 1942. Capitalism, Socialism, and Democracy. London: Routledge.
  299. Senior, T. 2011. Riot Games Hopes Tribunal System Will Clean Up League of Legends Community. http://www.pcgamer.com/2011/01/14/riot-games-hopes-tribunal-system-will-clean-up-league-of-legends-community.
  300. Sennett, R. 2007. The Culture of the New Capitalism. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.
  301. Sennett, R. 2012. Together: The Rituals, Pleasures, and Politics of Cooperation. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.
  302. Shapiro, C., and H. L. Varian. 1998. Information Rules: A Strategic Guide to the Network Economy. Boston, MA: Harvard Business School Press.
  303. Shibata, J. 2012. Therapeutic Seal Robot as Biofeedback Medical Device: Qualitative and Quantitative Evaluations of Robot Therapy in Dementia Care. Proceedings of the IEEE 100 (8): 2527–2538.
  304. Shilton, K. 2016. When They Are Your Big Data: Participatory Data Practices as a Lens on Big Data. In Big Data Is Not a Monolith, ed. C. Sugimoto, H. Ekbia, and M. Mattioli, 21–30. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
  305. Shirky, C. 2010. Cognitive Surplus: Creativity and Generosity in a Connected Age. London: Penguin Press.
  306. Silberman, M. S. 2015. Human-Centered Computing and the Future of Work: Lessons from Mechanical Turk and Turkopticon, 2008–2015. PhD thesis, University of California, Irvine.
  307. Simon, H. A. 1955. A Behavioral Model of Rational Choice. Quarterly Journal of Economics 69:99–118.
  308. Simon, H. A. 1960. The Corporation: Will It Be Managed by Machines? In Management and the Corporations 1985, ed. M. L. Anshen and G. L. Bach, 17–55. New York: McGraw-Hill.
  309. Simon, H. A. 1973. The Organization of Complex Systems. In Hierarchy Theory, ed. H. Patee, 3–27. New York: Braziller.
  310. Simon, H. A. 1977. The New Science of Management Decision. Englewood, NJ: Prentice-Hall.
  311. Simon, H. A. 1978. Rational Decision-Making in Business Organizations. Nobel Memorial Lecture.
  312. Simon, H. A. 1982. The Sciences of the Artificial. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
  313. Simon, H. A. 1987. Two Heads Are Better than One: The Collaboration between AI and OR. Interfaces 17 (4): 8–15.
  314. Simpson, F., and H. Williams. 2008. Evaluating Community Archaeology in the UK. Public Archaeology 7 (2): 69–90.
  315. Smith, A. 1776. An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of Wealth of Nations.
  316. Smythe, D. W. 1981. Dependency Road: Communications, Capitalism, Consciousness and Canada. Norwood, NJ: Ablex Publishing.
  317. Snider, L. 2014. Interrogating the Algorithm: Debt, Derivatives and the Social Reconstruction of Stock Market Trading. Critical Sociology 40 (5): 747–761.
  318. Sood, S., J. Antin, and E. Churchill. 2012. Profanity Use in Online Communities. Proceedings of the ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computer Systems. Pp. 1481–1490.
  319. Sotamaa, O. 2009. The Player’s Game: Towards Understanding Player Production among Computer Game Cultures. Ph.D. thesis, Tampere, Finland: University of Tampere.
  320. Sproull, L., and S. Kiesler. 1986. Reducing Social Context Cues: Electronic Mail in Organizational Communication. Management Science 32 (11): 1492–1512.
  321. Sprouse, J. 2011. A Validation of Amazon Mechanical Turk for the Collection of Acceptability Judgments in Linguistic Theory. Behavior Research Methods 43 (1): 155–167.
  322. Standing, G. 2011. The Precariat. London: Bloomsbury Academic.
  323. Star, S. L. 1990. Power, Technology and the Phenomenology of Conventions: On Being Allergic to Onions. Sociological Review 38 (1): 26–56.
  324. Stiglitz, J. 2006. Making Globalization Work. New York: W. W. Norton.
  325. Stiglitz, J. 2014. Is Inequality Inevitable? New York Times, June 29.
  326. Stone, K. V. W. 2006. Flexibilization, Globalization, and Privatization: Three Challenges to Labor Rights in Our Time. Osgoode Hall Law Journal 44 (1): 77–104.
  327. Suarez-Villa, L. 2012. Globalization and Technocapitalism: The Political Economy of Corporate Power and Technological Domination. Farnham: Ashgate.
  328. Suarez-Villa, L. 2015. Corporate Power, Oligopolies, and the Crisis of the State. Albany: SUNY Press.
  329. Suler, J. 2004. The Online Disinhibition Effect. The Impact of the Internet, Multimedia and Virtual Reality on Behavior and Society. Cyberpsychology & Behavior 7 (3): 321–326.
  330. Sung, J.-Y., L. Guo, R. Grinter, and H. Christensen. 2007. “My Roomba Is Rambo”: Intimate Home Appliances. Proceedings of the International Conference on Ubiquitous Computing.
  331. Swallow, S. 2011. How Recruiters Use Social Networks to Screen Candidates. Mashable, October 23. http://mashable.com/2011/10/23/how-recruiters-use-social-networks-to-screen-candidates-infographic.
  332. Tainter, J. 1990. The Collapse of Complex Societies. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  333. Takeuchi, Y. 2016. Printable Hydroponic Gardens: Initial Explorations and Considerations. Proceedings of the ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computer Systems, 449–458. New York: ACM.
  334. Tanaka, F., A. Cicourel, and J. Movellan. 2007. Socialization between Toddlers and Robots at an Early Childhood Education Center. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (PNAS) 104 (46): 17954–17958.
  335. Tanenbaum, J., A. Desjardins, and K. Tanenbaum. 2013. Steampunking Interaction Design. Interactions (May–June): 28–30.
  336. Targett, S., V. Verlysdonk, H. Hamilton, and D. Hepting. 2012. A Study of Interface Modifications in World of Warcraft. Game Studies 12 (2).
  337. Taylor, A. 2014. The People’s Platform: Taking Back Power and Culture in the Digital Age. New York: Metropolitan Books.
  338. Taylor, T. L. 2006a. Does WoW Change Everything?: How a PVP Server, Multinational Player Base, and Surveillance Mod Scene Caused Me Pause. Games and Culture 1 (4): 318–337.
  339. Taylor, T. L. 2006b. Play between Worlds: Exploring Online Game Culture. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
  340. Terranova, T. 2000. Free Labor: Producing Culture for the Digital Economy. Social Text 18 (2): 33–58.
  341. Terranova, T. 2003. Free Labor: Producing Culture for the Digital Economy. Electronic Book Review, June 20. http://www.electronicbookreview.com/thread/technocapitalism/voluntary.
  342. Thornton, R. 1847. The Expounder of Primitive Christianity. Ann Arbor, MI.
  343. Thrift, N. 2005. Knowing Capitalism. London: Sage.
  344. Tsui, K., M. Desai, H. Yanco, and C. Uhlik. 2011. Exploring Use Cases for Telepresence Robots. Proceedings of the 6th ACM/IEEE International Conference on Human-Robot Interaction.
  345. Turkle, S. 1997. Life on the Screen: Identity in the Age of the Internet. New York: Simon and Schuster.
  346. Turkle, S. 2011. Alone Together: Why We Expect More from Technology and Less from Each Other. New York: Basic Books.
  347. Ueno, N., R. Sawyer, and Y. Moro. 2016. Artifacts, Agency and Socio-technical Arrangement. Journal of Mind, Culture and Activity (July).
  348. US Bureau of Census. 1976. Historical Statistics in the United States. Series F1–F5.
  349. US Bureau of Census. 2010. Briefs.
  350. Vandermeer, J. 2011. The Ecology of Agroecosystems. New York: Jones & Bartlett.
  351. van Dijk, J. 2009. Users like you? Theorizing Agency in User-Generated Content. Media Culture & Society 31:41–58.
  352. van Dijk, J. 2013. The Culture of Connectivity. A Critical History of Social Media. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  353. van Dijk, J., and D. Nieborg. 2009. Wikinomics and Its Discontents: A Critical Analysis of Web 2.0 Business Manifestos. New Media & Society 11 (5): 855–874.
  354. Vercellone, C. 2007. From Formal Subsumption to General Intellect: Elements for a Marxist Reading to the Thesis of Cognitive Capitalism. Historical Materialism 15: 13–36.
  355. Vermuelen, S., B. Campbell, and J. Ingram. 2012. Climate Change and Food Systems. Annual Review of Environment and Resources 37 (1): 195–222.
  356. Vertesi, J. 2012. Seeing Like a Rover: Visualization, Embodiment, and Interaction on the Mars Exploration Rover Mission. Social Studies of Science 42:393–414.
  357. Virilio, P. 1986. Speed and Politics: An Essay on Dromology. New York: Semiotext(e).
  358. Vygotsky, L. 1986. Thought and Language. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
  359. Wada, K., Y. Ikeda, K. Inoue, and R. Uehara. 2010. Development and Preliminary Evaluation of a Caregiver’s Manual for Robot Therapy using the Therapeutic Seal Robot Paro. Paper presented at the RO-MAN Conference.
  360. Wada K., and T. Shibata. 2007. Living with Seal Robots–Its Socio-Psychological and Physiological Influences on the Elderly in a Care House. IEEE Trans Robot 23:972–980.
  361. Wada, K., T. Shibata, T. Saito, K. Sakamoto, and Kazuo Tanie. 2005. Psychological and Social Effects of One-Year Robot Assisted Activity on Elderly People at a Health Service Facility for the Aged. Proceedings of the 2005 IEEE International Conference on Robotics and Automation. Pp. 2796–2801.
  362. Wagner, P. 1994. A Sociology of Modernity: Liberty and Discipline. London: Routledge.
  363. Wagner, C. 2004. Wiki: A Technology for Conversational Knowledge Management and Group Collaboration. Communications of the Association for Information Systems 13 (Article 19).
  364. Wallerstein, I. 1983. Historical Capitalism. New York: Verso.
  365. Want, R. 2001. Ten Lessons Learned about Ubiquitous Computing. https://www.vs.inf.ethz.ch/events/dag2001/slides/roy-lessons.pdf
  366. Want, R., A. Hopper, V. Falcão, and J. Gibbons. 1992. The Active Badge Location System. ACM Transactions on Information Systems (TOIS) 10 (1): 91–102.
  367. Waterman, A. n.d. Neoclassical and Classical Growth Theory Compared. http://amcwaterman.com/working-papers.
  368. Webb, C. 2004. Google’s Eyes in Your Inbox. Washington Post. http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A44454-2004Apr2.html.
  369. Weber, L., and M. Korn. 2014. Where Did All the Entry-Level Jobs Go? Many Firms Expect New Graduates to Arrive Job-Ready from Day One. Wall Street Journal, August 6.
  370. Weber, M. 1904. The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism. London: Unwin Hyman.
  371. Webster, F. 1995. Theories of the Information Society. New York: Routledge.
  372. Weeks, K. 2011. The Problem with Work: Feminism, Marxism, Antiwork Politics, and Postwork Imaginaries. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
  373. Williamson, O. 1985. The Economic Institutions of Capitalism. New York: The Free Press.
  374. Winner, L. 1986. The Whale and the Reactor: A Search for Limits in an Age of High Technology. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
  375. Woelfer, J., and D. Hendry. 2011. Homeless Young People and Technology. Interaction (November–December):70–73.
  376. Womack, J., D. Jones, and D. Roos. 2007. The Machine That Changed the World: The Story of Lean Production: Toyota’s Secret Weapon in the Global Car Wars That Is Revolutionizing World Industry. New York: Free Press.
  377. World Economic Forum. 2011. Unlocking the Value of Personal Data: From Collection to Usage. http://www.weforum.org/reports/unlocking-value-personal-data-collection-usage.
  378. Wozniak, S. 2011. Hungry for AI Era. http://www.sbs.com.au/news/article/1694857/Wozniak-hungry-for-AI-era.
  379. Wright, E. O. 1997. Class Counts: Comparative Studies in Class Analysis. New York: Cambridge University Press.
  380. Wright, E. O. 2005. Foundations of a Neo-Marxist Class Analysis. In Approaches to Class Analysis, ed. E. O. Wright, 1–26. New York: Cambridge University Press.
  381. Wright, E. O. 2009. Envisioning Real Utopias. New York: Verso.
  382. Zhou, Y. 2005. Living on the Cyber Border: “Minjian” Political Writers in Chinese Cyberspace. Current Anthropology 46 (5): 779–803.
  383. Zittrain, J. 2008. The Future of the Internet. London: Allen Lane.
  384. Zuboff, S. 1988. In the Age of the Smart Machine. New York: Basic Books.