Hi all,

We took a break for the holidays and hope you did too! We invite you to our
next session of the X4D Talks <http://x4d.org> on *February 23rd at 1100
EST/1600 GMT/1800 CAT/2130 IST* on the *Future of Work*. Our speakers
include the following:


*Nicola Bidwell*International University of Management, Namibia

*Temporal Marginalisation by Ride-sharing Platforms*Tensions emerge when
algorithms designed to match supply and demand, such as on-demand service
platforms, do not account for the way time is differential. Automated
on-demand services contribute to, and normalise, temporal orders that
marginalise ‘just-in-time’ workers. This talk considers how platforms for
ride-sharing can undermine the work of drivers when they do not support
mutual, transient awareness of different temporalities, drawing on our work
in India and Namibia in the context of other literature.

*Julie Hui*
School of Information, University of Michigan, USA
*Watched, but Moving: Negotiating Gendered Mechanisms of Control in Gig
Work*
Women gig workers are impacted by algorithmic and non-algorithmic control
practices in the context of home service platforms in Bangalore. Control is
enacted through location tracking, communication monitoring, customer
ratings, among many other practices commonly deployed by gig work
platforms. However, these mechanisms of control impact workers' lives in
myriad ways beyond just the conditions of work. Women workers negotiate
their identities and sense of agency through the visibility afforded by
platform control. We question, How do platform control mechanisms reinforce
or challenge entrenched socio-cultural structures? How do women gig workers
negotiate platform control in ways that enhance personal agency?

*Naveen Bagalkot*
Srishti Manipal Institute of Art, Design & Technology, India
*Nervo Verdezoto*
School of Computer Science and Informatics, Cardiff University, UK
*The Invisible Work of Maintenance: Challenges and Implications for the
Future of Frontline Health Work*
As per the imagination of the future embedded in the National Digital
Health Blueprint, the health workers in India are seen as data-collectors
and content-distributors. As we begin to imagine ‘Future of Health Work’,
it is important to pause and really understand how this work happens,
bringing new sociocultural and technical insights to system design. Based
on a case study of frontline health workers in Karnataka (South India), we
describe how Frontline Health workers often act as invisible “maintainers”
of community health infrastructures caring for themselves and the
community. We discuss the implications of what kind of futures we can
imagine in community health.

*Carlos Toxtli*
West Virginia University, USA
The AI industry has powered a futuristic reality of self-driving cars and
voice assistants to help us with almost any need. However, this industry
has also created systemic challenges. For instance, while it has created
new labor platforms for improving machine learning algorithms, several
workers on these platforms are earning less than minimum wage. In this
talk, I will discuss not only how AI can be benefitted from crowd workers,
but also how crowd workers can be benefitted from AI to improve their
wages, well-being, and work.

*When:* February 23rd 1100 EST/1600 GMT/1800 CAT/2130 IST
*Where: *https://ucl.zoom.us/j/91854315774

Warmly,
Neha & Akhil
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