Work Without the Worker : Labour in the Age of Platform Capitalism
Work Without the Worker : Labour in the Age of Platform Capitalism
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Author(s): Jones, Phil
Jones, Philip
ISBN No.: 9781839760440
Pages: 176
Year: 202211
Format: Trade Paper
Price: $ 15.80
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available (Forthcoming)

"Beneath the noisy sphere of autonomous robots and smart assistants, Jones clearly and patiently reveals the hidden abode of underpaid, overworked, and insecure labourers that underpin our digital society. This is an essential guide to an often invisible world." -- Nick Snricek, author of Platform Capitalism "Let Phil Jones be your guide to the darkest underbelly of work under digitized capitalism, where tech barons surveil workers' every move and sell their clicks for profit, and the 'job' falls apart but we work more all the time. A beautifully written call to arms to stop this miserable future before it comes for all of us." --Sarah Jaffe, author of Work Won't Love You Back "In this fast-paced and exciting read, Phil Jones explores the hidden abodes of the digital economy, where the world's surplus workers label images, moderate content, and teach algorithms how to identify common house pets, all for a few cents an hour. Work Without the Worker explores how dispossessed microworkers might band together to spearhead a global movement for free-time and material security." --Aaron Benanav, author of Automation and the Future of Work "Takes readers to the hidden abode of production of artificial intelligence: a world of precarious, highly exploited, and onerous microwork increasingly performed in the slums, prisons, and refugee camps of sclerotic post-crisis capitalism. With an incandescent urgency, Jones argues that such digitally fragmented piecework threatens livelihoods of all sorts, but also that it offers a tantalizing potential for a world beyond wage labor--if we can fight for it.


" --Gavin Mueller, author of Breaking Things at Work "[Phil Jones] establishes himself as a leading figure in what might be called post-accelerationism. " --John Foster, Battleground.


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