Dmitry Muravyov
dmuravyov.bsky.social
Dmitry Muravyov
@dmuravyov.bsky.social
PhD Student @ TU Delft, Netherlands | STS, 'AI', critical data studies, political and ethical philosophy of technology | he/him
AI_ANXIETY: Zine Publication

networkcultures.org/blog/publica...

We are very happy to share the outcomes of the workshop about the AI research agenda in the humanities, arts, and social sciences
AI_Anxiety
AI_AnxietyProduced by Jordi Viader Guerrero, Dmitry Muravyov, Erica Gargaglione, Aarón Moreno Inglés, Mariana Fernández Mora, and Orestis KollyrisWith contributions by Dmitry Muravyov, Jord
networkcultures.org
September 22, 2025 at 8:44 AM
"How to live well with robots?"—this was the central question we continually posed to students in our Robots & Society course over the past two years. In a new paper, we reflect on our experience and outcomes of redesigning the course! sefi-jeea.org/index.php/se...
September 2, 2025 at 8:58 PM
Are there any texts about the cybernetics' ghostly presence in contemporary studies of technology? Not about how cybernetics did (not) influence something, but rather something akin to broad reflections on whether and in what ways/where/how cybernetics' history can be said to matter
June 18, 2025 at 5:15 PM
In terms of changing use of different terms, it's interesting how the distinction between weak and strong AI seems to gradually go out of fashion
June 5, 2025 at 9:50 AM
When someone publishes an article closely related to something I am currently working on, I vividly feel the presence of the World Spirit
June 4, 2025 at 4:11 PM
I decided to try out the Gemini Deep Research mode and accidentally "broke it down". I deeply appreciated though how poetic this breakdown is; there is only "the whole lot of nothing" at the end.
June 4, 2025 at 9:27 AM
Reposted by Dmitry Muravyov
Getting stuck while we're writing is a feature, not a bug. It's the point of the exercise. It's what happens when we are trying to express something we have not expressed before. That friction forces us to make the tools we need to understand and express it. Getting stuck is how we make meaning.
May 29, 2025 at 1:58 AM
I had a great time talking with @mayameme.bsky.social about her new book! So much fun thinking about failures, ethics & design, and technological critique—hope that others also find it interesting
networkcultures.org/blog/2025/05...
“Irony is an opportunity for ambivalence”: Interview with Maya Indira Ganesh about her Book Auto-Correct
In 2025, ARTez Press published Auto-Correct: The Fantasies and Failures of AI, Ethics, and the Driverless Car by Maya Indira Ganesh. I talked with Maya about the book — why and how technologies fail
networkcultures.org
May 19, 2025 at 8:31 AM
Today I did not feel like writing the actual thesis, so I decided to try to put together some things I learned about my topic in the form of a manifesto with theses. quite liberating, highly recommend
May 16, 2025 at 2:36 PM
one day I fill find a way for my technical university to pay for new left review subscription
May 15, 2025 at 10:50 AM
Approximately 6 years after I went to a summer school in Pisa, the university decided it's time to deactivate my account. Italians never hurry and I respect that
May 14, 2025 at 2:53 PM
Springer's system of having many journals with different author/reviewer log-ins sometimes drives me insane because the browser's password manager isn't really helpful with it; so, loggining in each time has to be this whole thing
May 6, 2025 at 5:41 PM
Reposted by Dmitry Muravyov
Today is publication date for our Fragilities volume!

"At a time when it may be easy to fall into a defeatist melancholia, if not outright pessimism, the book is an invitation to think from fragility to build life-affirming politics and ethics"

It's got an amazing line-up & it is open-access! 🤓
Fragilities: Essays on the Politics, Ethics, and Aesthetics of Maintenance and Repair
An original essay collection that explores the generative dimensions of fragility, which can help reveal new life-affirming politics and ethics.At a time w
direct.mit.edu
April 29, 2025 at 4:53 PM
Reposted by Dmitry Muravyov
Thinking about how to better forefront other zine authors on my ZineBakery.com homepage. I added a small thing: "including by authors random-specific-author-name-x, -y, -z, to name a few" to the top text's "[catalog collecting] zines by many folks" (code pulls catalog's CSV+randomizes display) +
April 22, 2025 at 9:17 PM
Reposted by Dmitry Muravyov
Call for registration

Research, Values, and Intervention: Navigating AI and Technomoral Futures
An Empirical Ethics Workshop with Shannon Vallor and Sabina Leonelli

📅 22 May 2025, 10-15:00, 📍 IAS, UvA

ias.uva.nl/content/even...
Research, Values, and Intervention: Navigating AI and Technomoral Futures - Institute for Advanced Study IAS
This workshop explores how values shape research practices and vice versa, focusing on the ethico-political implications of AI, large datasets, and infrastructures. Through discussions with Shannon Va...
ias.uva.nl
April 9, 2025 at 8:14 AM
On April 24th, we at TU Delft strike against the proposed budget cuts on higher education in the Netherlands.
April 8, 2025 at 2:39 PM
Reposted by Dmitry Muravyov
In plaats van een ‘bezuiniging’ zie ik het liever als een ‘detox’, bedoeld om de instellingen beter te laten aansluiten bij de innovatieve ‘democratie light’ die het kabinet voor ogen heeft.
March 30, 2025 at 8:03 AM
Harding's Objectivity and Diversity was such a precise description of how and why we can think of objectivity differently, nuanced yet also such a crisp text. Such a loss for so many academic communities.
A dear feminist science studies mentor passed on March 5. Have a good journey Sandra Harding. ❤️

Harding was UCLA Distinguished Professor Emerita of Education and Gender Studies, former Director of the Center for the Study of Women.

Link is an oral history interview with Sandra on her career.
Oral history interview with Sandra Harding
Sandra Harding was born in San Francisco, California, the first of five children born to Lloyd and Constance Harding. Her father's struggle to find work during the Great Depression led the family to L...
digital.sciencehistory.org
March 7, 2025 at 9:54 AM
I am in awe of this game about biometric surveillance industry in which you buy software, hardware and data infrastructure (which heats up unless cooled down) in a never-ending quest to label faces for profit-driven expansion. I highly recommend playing FACEMINER.
wristwork.itch.io/faceminer
March 1, 2025 at 3:12 PM
Reposted by Dmitry Muravyov
🎉 New article out in AI & Society!

🔍 My article challenges the idea that algorithms replace human judgment. Instead, they mediate the human-world relations in which judgments and self-reflection arise.

💬 Happy to discuss!

Read it here: link.springer.com/article/10.1...
February 27, 2025 at 3:05 PM
It took me a while, but super curious to see how this platform works. it's been some time since I tried a new one!
February 26, 2025 at 5:16 PM