<div dir="ltr">Hi all,<br><br>I've enjoyed reading your posts and wanted to take the opportunity to introduce myself. I'm Tyler Coburn, an artist and writer based in New York. For the conference, I'll be doing a few things, including a reading from my book, <i>I'm that angel. </i><div>
<br></div><div>The protagonist of the text is a content farmer who works for an organization like Demand Media, filing articles based on words peaking in Google Trends. A high quota of trending language, the wisdom goes, will trick the algorithm into awarding higher search rankings, yielding more "eyeballs" on the article—a standard metric of our online value.<br>
<br>Writing from this perspective became an exercise in claiming time and space in a field of production structured by quotas of language. Given that we rarely register strict delineations of personal and waged computer work, I envisaged the spans between buzzwords as spaces to disclose the character's inner life through anecdotes, speculations, anxieties, rants and the bits and bobs of cultural matter that periodically seed our individual content farms. The method is provisional—and the cultural analysis sometimes cripplingly pessimistic—but there's also a belief in the book about the literary possibilities for the programmatic and vernacular languages of the Internet.<br>
</div><div><br></div><div>By design, this book was written to be performed in data centers (the New York readings occurred in February 2013 at The Google Building), but I occasionally read for other appropriate contexts. Trebor, Sam and I are presently at work finding a classroom on campus that can simulate the cramped quarters of the data center office spaces where I normally read. Suffice it to say that it will be a small affair (15-20 people), and we'll be announcing sign-ups closer to the conference. I hope some of you will be interested in attending.</div>
<div><br></div><div>In addition, I'll be talking on a panel about <i>The Warp</i>, a project I've elaborated over the past year-and-a-half, which involves some MTurkers. I'm running a bit long here, so if you're interested in learning more about either project, have a browse round my website: <a href="http://www.tylercoburn.com">www.tylercoburn.com</a></div>
<div><br></div><div>I look forward to meeting you all and learning more about your work.</div><div><br></div><div>Best,</div><div>Tyler Coburn</div></div>