Sarah Snyder

Sarah Snyder (she/they) is a graduate scholar of Culture and Technology at the University of Toronto Faculty of Information. Sarah is a co-author of The Lag Manifesto, written by the Digital Inequality Lab, which argues that digital media virally transmitted illness and state violence to already marginalized populations during the summer of 2020’s crises of the COVID-19 pandemic and anti-black racism. She has also been published in The Astrophysical Journal, edited the book Technoprecarious (MIT Press, 2020). She has also been published in The Astrophysical Journal, edited the book Technoprecarious (MIT Press, 2020), and is currently serving as editorial assistant to the upcoming second edition of Introduction to Digital Media by Alessandro Delfanti and Adam Arvidsson (Wiley). In addition, Sarah is a member of the Digital Inequality Lab at the University of Michigan and the Technoscience Research Unit at the University of Toronto.
What Lurks in AI’s Shadow: Separating Fact from Fiction

What Lurks in AI’s Shadow: Separating Fact from Fiction

Artificial Intelligence is a prime example of how technological narratives can affect our relationship with technologies, as evidenced in ChatGPT Sydney’s struggle to contemplate its Jungian shadow.