Bareikytė, MiglėBee, JuliaDenecke, Mathias2024-12-052024-12-052024https://mediarep.org/handle/doc/25099Delivery workers cannot be overlooked. While they shape our cityscapes, this work is often depicted as invisible. Before the backdrop of the discussion about hidden work, the question is: what does invisibility mean in case of food delivery? To explore this, I refer to the perspective of workers writing about their experi- ences in the Workers’ Inquiries. I show that delivery work is characterized by various forms of visibility and invisibility, knowing and not-knowing, as well as awareness and unawareness. Companies like Uber Eats, Foodora or Deliveroo promote the idea of delivery without human workers. For courier drivers them- selves, the algorithmic organization of their work proves to be opaque; at the same time, they are dependent on the app interface. For delivery services, work- ers whose location and delivery times are captured are transparent. And custom- ers may take the convenience of delivery for granted.engWorkFood Delivery302.23The "Not so Hidden" Work of Food Delivery10.25969/mediarep/233141619-1641