{"title":"抵制技术的必然性:Google Wing 的无人机送货和我们的天空之战。","authors":"Anna Zenz, Julia Powles","doi":"10.1098/rsta.2024.0107","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p>Efforts to realize on-demand delivery drone networks present a stark example of how the technology industry seeks to dominate new markets, regardless of societal consequences. Analyzing the most advanced of these efforts-Google Wing's operations in Australia since 2017-we identify the instrumental role of narratives of technological inevitability (of tech expansion, and societal adaptation) in catalyzing new sky-based commerce. Yet the interest of this case study lies in a twist. Google Wing's rollout in Australia's capital, Canberra, initially proceeded as a textbook example of tech expansion. However, citizen engagement and public governance dramatically intervened and, we argue, disrupted the logic of technological inevitability. This article is the first to analyze these dynamics, many of which originated with Bonython Against Drones (BAD), a community action group forged from those who first lived under Google's food delivery drones. The article exposes the flawed logic of technological inevitability as the enabling force of tech expansion; characterizes the governance failures that help install corporate visions for public goods; animates the potentialities of communities living with new technologies; and identifies the sky itself, as both a public commons and a vital, living habitat, as a key future locus for participatory governance. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
实现无人机按需送货网络的努力提供了一个鲜明的例子,说明科技行业如何不顾社会后果,力图主导新市场。通过分析其中最先进的努力--谷歌无人机翼自2017年以来在澳大利亚的运营,我们发现了技术必然性(技术扩张和社会适应)叙事在催化新的空中商业中的工具性作用。然而,本案例研究的趣味在于一个转折。谷歌翼在澳大利亚首都堪培拉的推广最初是作为技术扩张的教科书范例进行的。然而,公民参与和公共治理戏剧性地介入其中,我们认为,这打破了技术必然性的逻辑。这篇文章首次分析了这些动态,其中许多源于 "反无人机社区行动组织"(Bonython Against Drones,BAD)。这篇文章揭露了技术必然性作为技术扩张推动力的错误逻辑;描述了有助于建立企业公共产品愿景的治理失败;激发了与新技术共存的社区的潜力;并指出天空本身既是公共公域,也是重要的、有生命力的栖息地,是未来参与式治理的关键地点。本文是 "共创未来:参与式城市与数字治理 "主题刊物的一部分。
Resisting technological inevitability: Google Wing's delivery drones and the fight for our skies.
Efforts to realize on-demand delivery drone networks present a stark example of how the technology industry seeks to dominate new markets, regardless of societal consequences. Analyzing the most advanced of these efforts-Google Wing's operations in Australia since 2017-we identify the instrumental role of narratives of technological inevitability (of tech expansion, and societal adaptation) in catalyzing new sky-based commerce. Yet the interest of this case study lies in a twist. Google Wing's rollout in Australia's capital, Canberra, initially proceeded as a textbook example of tech expansion. However, citizen engagement and public governance dramatically intervened and, we argue, disrupted the logic of technological inevitability. This article is the first to analyze these dynamics, many of which originated with Bonython Against Drones (BAD), a community action group forged from those who first lived under Google's food delivery drones. The article exposes the flawed logic of technological inevitability as the enabling force of tech expansion; characterizes the governance failures that help install corporate visions for public goods; animates the potentialities of communities living with new technologies; and identifies the sky itself, as both a public commons and a vital, living habitat, as a key future locus for participatory governance. This article is part of the theme issue 'Co-creating the future: participatory cities and digital governance'.
期刊介绍:
Continuing its long history of influential scientific publishing, Philosophical Transactions A publishes high-quality theme issues on topics of current importance and general interest within the physical, mathematical and engineering sciences, guest-edited by leading authorities and comprising new research, reviews and opinions from prominent researchers.