Data Grab: The New Colonialism of Big Tech and How to Fight Back

Ulises Mejias, Nick Couldry

Click here to view the external video (YouTube). More information

Summary
The speakers will introduce their new book, Data Grab, which argues that the extractive practices of today’s tech giants represent a new stage of colonialism. They will also discuss how this data colonialism can be resisted through collective action and new acts of imagination
Talk
English
Conference

In their new book, Data Grab, Mejias and Couldry argue that today’s tech corporations have engineered an extractive form of doing business that builds an unjust social and economic order, leads to job precarity, and degrades the environment. Like the land grabs of the past, today’s data grab converts our data into raw material for the generation of corporate profit against our own interests, as can be seen in the case of AI and particularly genAI. The role that data plays in contemporary power relations is not only a development of capitalism, but represents a new colonial phase in human history that rivals in importance the emergence of historic colonialism. But resistance is possible. To defy this new form of data colonialism, we must learn from previous forms of anti-colonial resistance and work together to imagine entirely new ones. 

Following the lecture, there will be a book signing session with Nick and Ulises for their new book, "Data Grab: The new Colonialism of Big Tech and how to fight back," at the Dussmann Book Table.

Bild Ulises Mejias
Professor of Communication Studies
Bild Nick Couldry
Professor of Media Communications and Social Theory