cybertarian

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English[edit]

Etymology 1[edit]

Blend of cyber- +‎ proletarian.

Noun[edit]

cybertarian (plural cybertarians)

  1. (Marxism, neologism) A member of the cybertariat class.
    • 2011, Sasha Lilley, quoting Ursula Huws, Capital and Its Discontents: Conversations With Radical Thinkers in a Time of Tumult, Oakland, C.A.: PM Press, →ISBN, page 177:
      I've been doing a lot of research particularly in India but in other Asian countries too on, if you like, the new cybertarians who are growing up working in an offshore call centers and software development and so on.
    • 2021 May 27, Jenna Burrell, Marion Fourcade, “The Society of Algorithms”, in Annual Review of Sociology, volume 47, San Mateo, C.A.: Annual Reviews, →DOI, →ISSN, →OCLC, page 221:
      Coders allied to cyber workers' rights also play a role, creating tools to aid cybertarians in information sharing and self-organizing. The ingenious Turkopticon, for example, is a web browser plugin that overlays features on the Amazon Mechanical Turk platform, helping workers who do pay-per-task clickwork to avoid poor quality jobs, delayed payment, and outright wage theft (Irani & Silberman 2013).

Etymology 2[edit]

Blend of cyber- +‎ libertarian.

Noun[edit]

cybertarian (plural cybertarians)

  1. (neologism) Someone who applies libertarian ideology to the Internet; a follower of cybertarianism.
    • 2002, Terry Halbert, Elaine Ingulli, CyberEthics, Mason, O.H.: West, →ISBN, page 22:
      John Perry Barlow is a "cybertarian," a form of libertarian. In other words, he believes in bottom-up, decentralized solutions to the dilemmas that arise in cyberspace.
    • 2015 January 23, Toby Miller, “How to deal with electronic waste? Make it a national security issue”, in The Conversation[1], archived from the original on 2024-01-30:
      We're in the midst of fevered discussions about communications and security. Cybertarian campaigners want to stop collusion between corporations and governments to intercept citizen chat; attention-grabbing adolescents at Anonymous want to disrupt murderers who dislike mockery of their principal prophet and the gilt-edged grown-ups in national security services want to listen in on plans to revenge such blasphemy.
Derived terms[edit]