Tributary

Authors

  • James Davoll Newcastle University, Queens University Belfast
  • Paul Dolan Northumbria University
  • Pete Howson Northumbria University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15845/jaf.v7i01.3798

Keywords:

data, energy, digital culture, human infrastructures

Abstract

Tributary is an experimental ethnographic film that traces the movement and harnessing of natural resources within the Icelandic landscape to support our digital lives.

Tributary explores covert, 'black-boxed' data centres (remote and highly secure sites) by tracking water and geothermal sources to the infrastructure required to power and house these physical locations of intensive computational processing.

Created from a combination of traditional and experimental field recording techniques made within Iceland and the UK, Tributary aims to problematise the notion of 'green' data centres. It showcases the intensive energy requirements required to prop up the digital infrastructure of contemporary life. These include cryptocurrency mining, cloud storage, digital image production and media streaming. 

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Published

2023-05-08

How to Cite

Davoll, J., Dolan, P., & Howson, P. (2023). Tributary. Journal of Anthropological Films, 7(01). https://doi.org/10.15845/jaf.v7i01.3798

Issue

Section

Films