“…Digital inequalities research has been slow in investigating the emerging digital economy (Schor, Fitzmaurice, Carfagna, Attwood‐Charles, & Poteat, , for a good counter‐example). What we know today about participation in the digital economy is that emerging forms of digital (e.g., Upwork, Amazon Mechincal Turk) or digitally mediated (e.g., Uber, TaskRabbit) work come with new challenges, for example in terms of surveillance and control (Rosenblat & Stark, ; Wood, Graham, Lehdonvirta, & Hjorth, ) as well as collective action (Newlands, Lutz, & Fieseler, ; Wood, Lehdonvirta, & Graham, ). However, how these challenges connect to structural inequalities—for example whether economically advantaged workers are better able to avoid algorithmic control and organize collectively—remains an open question that digital inequalities research should set out to answer.…”