Dark citizen science

James Riley*, Will Mason-Wilkes

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

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Abstract

Citizen science is often celebrated. We interrogate this position through exploration of socio-technoscientific phenomena that mirror citizen science yet are disaligned with its ideals. We term this ‘Dark Citizen Science’. We identify five conceptual dimensions of citizen science – purpose, process, perceptibility, power and public effect. Dark citizen science mirrors traditional citizen science in purpose and process but diverges in perceptibility, power and public effect. We compare two Internet-based categorisation processes, Citizen Science project Galaxy Zoo and Dark Citizen Science project Google’s reCAPTCHA. We highlight that the reader has, likely unknowingly, provided unpaid technoscientific labour to Google. We apply insights from our analysis of dark citizen science to traditional citizen science. Linking citizen science as practice and normative democratic ideal ignores how some science-citizen configurations actively pit practice against ideal. Further, failure to fully consider the implications of citizen science for science and society allows exploitative elements of citizen science to evade the sociological gaze.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)142-157
Number of pages16
JournalPublic Understanding of Science
Volume33
Issue number2
Early online date20 Oct 2023
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Feb 2024

Keywords

  • citizen science
  • crowdsourcing
  • Google reCAPTCHA
  • labour
  • scientific institutions
  • Zooniverse

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