Article ID: CBB482766792

Humanly Extended Automation or the Future of Work Seen through Amazon Patents (May 2021)

unapi

Amazon’s projects for future automation contribute to anxieties about the marginalization of living labor in warehousing. Yet, a systematic analysis of patents owned by Amazon suggests that workers are not about to disappear from the warehouse floor. Many patents portray machines that increase worker surveillance and work rhythms. Others aim at incorporating workers’ activities into machinery to rationalize the labor process in an ever more pervasive form of digital Taylorism. Patents materialize the company’s desire for a technological future in which workers act and sense on behalf of machinery, becoming its living and sensing appendages. In this new relationship, humans extend machinery and its reach. Through the work-in-progress process of reaching increasing levels of automation, Amazon develops new technical foundations that consolidate its power in the digital workplace.

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Authors & Contributors
Coeckelbergh, Mark
Massimo Ciccozzi
Lise Justesen
Katina Michael
Bruyninckx, Joeri
Alexandra H Vinson
Journals
Science, Technology and Human Values
IEEE Technology and Society Magazine
Science as Culture
Icon: Journal of the International Committee for the History of Technology
Social Studies of Science
History and Technology
Publishers
MIT Press
Routledge
Concepts
Technoscience; science and technology studies
Human-machine interaction
Automation
Robots
Technology and society
Artificial intelligence
People
Tadashi, Yamashita
Tenner, Edward
Ellul, Jacques
Barthes, Roland
Time Periods
21st century
20th century, late
20th century
Places
United States
Shenzhen (China)
Japan
Germany
Europe
China
Institutions
Amazon (Firm)
Cisco Systems, Inc.
Deutsches Museum, Munich
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