Platform Coloniality and Infrastructure era
In the Platform Coloniality and Infrastructure era (2018-2024), Nick Couldry and Ulises Mejias theorize data colonialism, showing how platform infrastructures extract data, surveil, and monetize life across borders. Trebor Scholz foregrounds digital labor and platform cooperativism, detailing how gig-work and monetization in short-video ecosystems reproduce power asymmetries and urging worker-led, cooperative models. Tarleton Gillespie analyzes platform power and algorithmic governance, clarifying how content moderation, visibility controls, and data-flow management function as infrastructural levers shaping cultural expression. Nick Srnicek's Platform Capitalism provides a structural lens on platform architectures and monetization regimes embedded in state-capital authority, a framework that scholars extend to analyze attention economies and transnational digital labor.