“…These include concern for how the digital is remapping human and non‐human relations as well as digital maps themselves, with a growing interest in digital natures, digital ecologies, digital cities, digital geopolitics and even digital territory (Datta, 2018; Morris, 2022; Prebble et al, 2021; Searle et al, 2023; Smith et al, 2020; Woods, 2021; Zook & Graham, 2018). While smart urbanism and associated forms of platform capitalism continue to highlight the interdependencies of code/space, scholarship on digital geographies is also documenting spatial inequities within these interdependencies at multiple scales and in particular places, ranging from the platforms of online education and debt relations to the embodied experience of tech‐enabled home care (House‐Peters et al, 2019; Reid, 2022; Roos‐Breines et al, 2019: Sparke, 2017; Tan, 2022). Feminist arguments in these debates point to the contradictory possibilities of thriving otherwise and staying with the trouble of such digital spaces (McLean, 2020), and we think that a care‐full Transactions can continue to stay with the trouble in a similar way as it adapts to the wider changes forced on journals and their editors by the online ecosystems for publishing in which we are now embedded.…”