Understanding Human Intervention in the Platform Economy: A case study of an indie food delivery service
This paper examines the sociotechnical infrastructure of an "indie" food delivery platform. The platform, Nosh, provides an alternative to mainstream services, such as Doordash and Uber Eats, in several communities in the Western United States. We interviewed 28 stakeholders including rest...
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Zusammenfassung: | This paper examines the sociotechnical infrastructure of an "indie" food
delivery platform. The platform, Nosh, provides an alternative to mainstream
services, such as Doordash and Uber Eats, in several communities in the Western
United States. We interviewed 28 stakeholders including restauranteurs,
couriers, consumers, and platform administrators. Drawing on infrastructure
literature, we learned that the platform is a patchwork of disparate technical
systems held together by human intervention. Participants join this platform
because they receive greater agency, financial security, and local support. We
identify human intervention's key role in making food delivery platform users
feel respected. This study provides insights into the affordances, limitations,
and possibilities of food delivery platforms designed to prioritize local
contexts over transnational scales. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2303.03523 |