What's behind a picture? The term "metadata" is used to describe the
information that travels with a digital image file but is unseen within
the image itself. In our networked digital environment, metadata is
accessed by both human users and artificial intelligences. Software
algorithms orchestrate what images we see and exchange while collecting
the valuable data generated by our interactions. In our moment,
dominated by image-based social media and surveillance, we are becoming
increasingly aware that understanding the information that circulates
unseen around photographic images is just as important as seeing what
they represent. This fascinating, fully-illustrated publication explores
new paradigms for understanding the ecology of the photographic image
through the work of an international selection of contemporary artists
and visual activists. This includes not just the tags or descriptors
attached to image files, but the power relationships, biases, and
economic interests that are not always visible in the image itself.