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The Information Trade

How Big Tech Conquers Countries, Challenges Our Rights, and Transforms Our World

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

"A timely, compelling, and expertly researched passport to the tech companies that rule today's digital landscape."Blake Harris, bestselling author of Console Wars and The History of the Future.

In this provocative book about our new tech-based reality, political insider and tech expert Alexis Wichowski considers the unchecked rise of tech giants like Facebook, Google, Amazon, Apple, Microsoft, and Tesla—what she calls “net states”— and their unavoidable influence in our lives. Rivaling nation states in power and capital, today’s net states are reaching into our physical world, inserting digital services into our lived environments in ways both unseen and, at times, unknown to us. They are transforming the way the world works, putting our rights up for grabs, from personal privacy to national security.  

Combining original reporting and insights drawn from more than 100 interviews with technology and government insiders, including Microsoft president Brad Smith, Google CEO Eric Schmidt, the former Federal Trade Commission chair under President Obama, and the managing director of Jigsaw—Google’s Department of Counter-terrorism against extremism and cyber-attacks—The Information Trade explores what happens we give up our personal freedom and individual autonomy in exchange for an easy, plugged-in existence, and shows what we can do to control our relationship with net states before they irreversibly change our future.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      January 6, 2020
      Wichowski, an adjunct professor of technology at Columbia University, reveals how “net states” (“tech entities that act like countries”) are changing “defense, diplomacy, public infrastructure, and citizen services,” in this eye-opening debut. Examining recent acquisitions made by Amazon, Apple, Facebook, Google, Microsoft, and Tesla, Wichowski explores the roles that major tech companies now play in space travel, health monitoring, biotech, and manufacturing. She describes how the original “tech ethos” of “creat some good in the world” now drives net states to take on huge projects, such as providing new energy infrastructure in Puerto Rico and investing in asteroid mining companies, where they act like sovereign states but lack the permanence and accountability of governments. Wichowski warns that the status quo, in which “citizen-users” of tech platforms must “relinquish their right to privacy” is unsustainable, and proposes a Declaration of Citizen-User Rights for reclaiming personal power that’s been given away in exchange for convenience. Wichowski’s detailed reporting and careful attention to the big picture make for a quick and thought-provoking reading experience. This erudite analysis should be required reading for tech CEOs, policy makers, and everyone concerned about the ubiquity of a handful of companies in their daily lives.

    • Kirkus

      January 15, 2020
      Media analyst and New York City government official Wichowski examines the evolving relationships of nation-states and technology firms in the modern world. Building on a 2017 Wired article, the author proposes that tech giants such as Facebook, Apple, and Microsoft are "net states," battlefields and weapons alike in the political and martial realm. "Net states are entities that act like countries," she writes, as with Silk Road, which, though manifestly engaged in illegal activities, also had a kind of sovereign right over private data entrusted to it by its users. In that case, when two governments wrestled over legal access to that data, a tech company, Microsoft, sheltered it--a precarious situation, to be sure, inasmuch as tech companies such as Google and Amazon are in the business of selling cloud storage to both government agencies and private individuals who might rightly object to their data being sold. Wichowski examines the behavior of net states IRL--in real life, that is--in such places as hurricane-damaged Puerto Rico, where Tesla and Google turned out to be more helpful than the federal government. She looks deeply into issues of privacy and the rights of technology users, whom so many of the net states seem to regard as mere troves of data. Wichowski notes that infrastructure improvements are likelier to be made by net states than "real" ones, all with a clear eye toward a future in which they are truly sovereign. She concludes her eminently accessible, deeply researched exploration by proposing that business models change so that consumers can more easily protect their data--but for a price, for "if our data, privacy, and sense of power are precious to us, then we need to offer something else that's valuable. And just about everyone values money." That may strike some as blackmail, but it seems eminently sensible given how much of it is afloat in the world, especially in the hands of nefarious actors. Civil libertarians as well as geopolitics buffs and tech geeks will find much of value here.

      COPYRIGHT(2020) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • English

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