Between 2023 and 2026, the infrastructure through which we discover the world changed completely. Search gave way to synthesis. Lists gave way to paragraphs. And the physical world - its restaurants, its institutions, its century-old communities - began to disappear from the systems that now decide what exists.
Algorithmic Invisibility names this condition and maps its architecture. Drawing on a decade of research into how informational membranes form and sustain themselves in digital networks, Drey Russell identifies four interlocking layers through which physical places vanish from the cultural conversation: structural, narrative, social, and identity. Each layer operates differently. Each requires a different kind of work.
The book offers a diagnostic framework, a practical methodology, and a self-audit for anyone trying to understand why the digital layer has stopped reflecting the physical world - and what it would take to close that gap.
Its audience is broader than its subject suggests. The forces that make a restaurant invisible to an AI are the same forces that erode institutional memory, fragment community identity, and quietly erase what a neighborhood knows about itself. This is not a marketing problem. It is a structural condition of the digitalized world - one reshaping the cultural geography of where people go, what they try, and what survives long enough to become tradition.
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Librería: California Books, Miami, FL, Estados Unidos de America
Condición: New. Nº de ref. del artículo: I-9798995920618
Cantidad disponible: Más de 20 disponibles