“…As Marika Cifor, Patricia Garia, T. L. Cowan, Jasmine Rault, Tonia Sutherland, Anita Say Chan, Jennifer Rode, Anna Lauren Hoffman, Niloufar Salehi, and Lisa Nakamura, the collective authors of the "Feminist Data Manifest-No" assert, such projects "commit to taking back control over the ways we behave, love, and engage with data and its technologies" (n.d). 1 Yet, as Eve Tuck and Wayne Yang remind us, these projects are messy and involve "strategic and contingent collaborations" rather than lasting and simplifying solidarities (Tuck & Yang, 2012, 28;Garba & Sorentino, 2020). Whose vision of decoloniality matters when describing the potentialities and limits of these developments (Lyons et al, 2017;Raval, 2019)?…”