Recommended for you: The Netflix Prize and the production of algorithmic culture
Top Cited Papers
Open Access
- 23 June 2014
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in New Media & Society
- Vol. 18 (1), 117-137
- https://doi.org/10.1177/1461444814538646
Abstract
How does algorithmic information processing affect the meaning of the word culture, and, by extension, cultural practice? We address this question by focusing on the Netflix Prize (2006–2009), a contest offering US$1m to the first individual or team to boost the accuracy of the company’s existing movie recommendation system by 10%. Although billed as a technical challenge intended for engineers, we argue that the Netflix Prize was equally an effort to reinterpret the meaning of culture in ways that overlapped with, but also diverged in important respects from, the three dominant senses of the term assayed by Raymond Williams. Thus, this essay explores the conceptual and semantic work required to render algorithmic information processing systems legible as forms of cultural decision making. It also then represents an effort to add depth and dimension to the concept of “algorithmic culture.”Keywords
This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- Hedging the commonsPublished by The University of Iowa ,2018
- The Relevance of AlgorithmsPublished by MIT Press ,2014
- A New Algorithmic IdentityTheory, Culture & Society, 2011
- Cruel OptimismPublished by Duke University Press ,2011
- The Computer Boys Take OverPublished by MIT Press ,2010
- All Together Now: A Perspective on the Netflix PrizeCHANCE, 2010
- Wired ShutPublished by MIT Press ,2007
- Technology and Its Discontents: On the Verge of the PosthumanAmerican Quarterly, 2006
- How We Became PosthumanPublished by University of Chicago Press ,1999
- Culture and Anarchy and other writingsPublished by Cambridge University Press (CUP) ,1993