Standards

Jentery Sayers | Unlearning the Internet | Week 3
DHum 150 | UVic English | 21 January 2019
Slides Online: jentery.github.io/150/slides/week3m

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This survey is not intended to be exhauastive.

Defining "Standard"

sets of agreed-upon rules for production that span communities and
are deployed to render things interoperable

enforced by committees or legal bodies

compete with other standards

vehicles for ostensible neutrality of tech:
once tech is standardized, people can point to it as a “disinterested”
instrument for observation or decision-making

so . . . how are values baked into the standardization process?

Some Standards

QWERTY (keyboard design from 1870s typewriters)
DOS (operating system from 1980s)
VCR (video format competing with Betamax in 1970s and '80s)
MP3 (audio format from 1990s)

Shirley Cards

Lorna Roth: "'skin-colour balance' in still photography printing refers
historically to a process in which a nrom reference card showing a
'Caucasian' woman wearing a colourful, high-contrast dress is used
as a basis for measuring and calibrating the skin tones on the photograph
being printed. The light skin tones of these women—named 'Shirley' by
male industry users after the name of the first colour test-strip card model
—have been the recognized skin ideal standard for most North American
analogue photo labs since the early part of the twentieth century and
they continue to function as the dominant norm."

Quote drawn from Roth (2009), "Looking at Shirley, the Ultimate Norm"

An Interview with Dr. Roth

Video care of Kelley Institute for International Business at Indiana University

Some History

1950s: graduation and class photos showed details of only white children's faces; parents requested a wider continuum of dark skin tones

1995: multiracial reference card created (recognition of investment in
addressing a multiracial clientele)

Questions

Why not use men more often in the reference cards?

What values are baked into Shirley Cards?

How do those values change with time and across technologies?

What's the difference between a "tacit" and "deliberate" design choice?

How might Shirley Cards appear neutral or disinterested in decision-making?

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