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Dive into the research topics where Mark Coté is active.

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Featured researches published by Mark Coté.


Big Data & Society | 2015

Hacking the social life of Big Data

Jennifer Pybus; Mark Coté; Tobias Blanke

This paper builds off the Our Data Ourselves research project, which examined ways of understanding and reclaiming the data that young people produce on smartphone devices. Here we explore the growing usage and centrality of mobiles in the lives of young people, questioning what data-making possibilities exist if users can either uncover and/or capture what data controllers such as Facebook monetize and share about themselves with third-parties. We outline the MobileMiner, an app we created to consider how gaining access to one’s own data not only augments the agency of the individual but of the collective user. Finally, we discuss the data making that transpired during our hackathon. Such interventions in the enclosed processes of datafication are meant as a preliminary investigation into the possibilities that arise when young people are given back the data which they are normally structurally precluded from accessing.


Digital Culture & Society | 2016

Introduction. Politics of Big Data

Mark Coté; Paolo Gerbaudo; Jennifer Pybus

This special issue offers a critical dialogue around the myriad political dimensions of Big Data. We begin by recognising that the technological objects of Big Data are unprecedented in the speed, scope and scale of their computation and knowledge production. This critical dialogue is grounded in an equal recognition of continuities around Big Data’s social, cultural, and political economic dimensions.


Journal of Communication Inquiry | 2011

What Is a Media Dispositif? Compositions With Bifo

Mark Coté

This article is a dialogue with the Italian autonomist media theorist Franco Berardi, also known as Bifo. The discussion turns on how to conceptually frame Italian experiments in media activism—from the pirate broadcaster Radio Alice to the networked microemissions of Teletreet. Throughout, special emphasis is put on the importance of Foucault, and Deleuze and Guattari to the creative wing of Italian autonomist thought which focused on media, communication, and culture. Thus “the Italian Foucault” is presented as an apposite conceptual persona. Finally, both the Foucault-inspired dispositif and the more autonomist composizione (elsewhere presented as either composition or recombination) are suggestions for better theorizing new networked organizational forms. Thus, media is presented as constitutive of the social body; that is, media is not understood as an additive with “effects” but as comprising and calibrating those constitutive elements, their affective, communicative, and signifying capacities.


Digital Culture & Society | 2016

Simondon on Datafication. A Techno-Cultural Method

Mark Coté; Jennifer Pybus

Abstract This article proposes the techno-cultural workshop as an innovative method for opening up the materiality of computational media and data flows and order to increase understanding of the socio-cultural and political-economic dimensions of datafication. Building upon the critical, creative hacker ethos of technological engagement, and the collective practice of the hackathon, the techno-cultural workshops is directed at humanities researchers and social and cultural theorists. We conceptually frame this method via Simondon as a practice-led opportunity to rethink the contested relationship between the human, nature and technology, with a view to challenging social and cultural theory that ignores the human reality of the technical object. We outline an exemplar techno-cultural workshop which explored mobile apps as i) an opportunity to use new digital tools for empirical research, and ii) as technical objects and elements for better understanding their social and cultural dimensions. We see political efficacy in the techno-cultural method not only in augmenting critical and creative agency, but as a practical exploration of the concept of data technicity, an inexhaustible relationality that exceeds the normative and regulatory utility of the data we generate and can be linked anew into collective capacities to act.


International Workshop on Personal Analytics and Privacy | 2017

Research on Online Digital Cultures - Community Extraction and Analysis by Markov and k-Means Clustering

Giles Greenway; Tobias Blanke; Mark Coté; Jennifer Pybus

We investigate approaches to personal data analytics that involves the participation of all actors in our shared digital culture. We analyse their communities by identifying and clustering social relations using mobile and social media data. The work is part of our effort to develop tools to create a “social data commons”, an open research environment that will share innovative tools and data sets to researchers interested in accessing the data that surrounds the production and circulation of digital culture and their actors. This experiment focuses on the groups of clustered relations that are formed within a user’s social data traces. Community extraction is a popular part of the analysis of social data. We have applied the technique of Markov Clustering to the Twitter networks of social actors. Qualitatively, we demonstrate that it is more effective than the Louvain method for finding social groups known to the subjects, while still being very simple to implement. We also demonstrate that traces of cell towers captured using our “MobileMiner” mobile application are sufficient to capture significant details about their social relations by the simple application of k-means.


Archive | 2007

Learning to immaterial labour 2.0: MySpace and social networks

Mark Coté; Jennifer Pybus


Cultural studies review | 2014

Data Motility: The Materiality of Big Social Data

Mark Coté


Archive | 2011

Learning to immaterial labour 2.0: Facebook and social networks

Mark Coté; Jennifer Pybus


Transcript Verlag | 2011

Social networks: erziehung zur immateriellen arbeit 2.0

Mark Coté; Jennifer Pybus


international conference on big data | 2014

Mining mobile youth cultures

Tobias Blanke; Giles Greenway; Jennifer Pybus; Mark Coté

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