Buy new:
-
Ships from: bellwetherbooks Sold by: bellwetherbooks
Save with Used - Very Good
-
Ships from: World of Books (previously glenthebookseller) Sold by: World of Books (previously glenthebookseller)
Download the free Kindle app and start reading Kindle books instantly on your smartphone, tablet, or computer - no Kindle device required.
Read instantly on your browser with Kindle for Web.
Using your mobile phone camera - scan the code below and download the Kindle app.
Follow the author
OK
Beyond the Valley: How Innovators around the World are Overcoming Inequality and Creating the Technologies of Tomorrow (Mit Press) Hardcover – October 29, 2019
Purchase options and add-ons
In this provocative book, Ramesh Srinivasan describes the internet as both an enabler of frictionless efficiency and a dirty tangle of politics, economics, and other inefficient, inharmonious human activities. We may love the immediacy of Google search results, the convenience of buying from Amazon, and the elegance and power of our Apple devices, but it's a one-way, top-down process. We're not asked for our input, or our opinions—only for our data. The internet is brought to us by wealthy technologists in Silicon Valley and China. It's time, Srinivasan argues, that we think in terms beyond the Valley.
Srinivasan focuses on the disconnection he sees between designers and users, producers and consumers, and tech elites and the rest of us. The recent Cambridge Analytica and Russian misinformation scandals exemplify the imbalance of a digital world that puts profits before inclusivity and democracy. In search of a more democratic internet, Srinivasan takes us to the mountains of Oaxaca, East and West Africa, China, Scandinavia, North America, and elsewhere, visiting the “design labs” of rural, low-income, and indigenous people around the world. He talks to a range of high-profile public figures—including Elizabeth Warren, David Axelrod, Eric Holder, Noam Chomsky, Lawrence Lessig, and the founders of Reddit, as well as community organizers, labor leaders, and human rights activists.. To make a better internet, Srinivasan says, we need a new ethic of diversity, openness, and inclusivity, empowering those now excluded from decisions about how technologies are designed, who profits from them, and who are surveilled and exploited by them.
- Print length424 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherThe MIT Press
- Publication dateOctober 29, 2019
- Dimensions6.31 x 1.27 x 9.31 inches
- ISBN-100262043130
- ISBN-13978-0262043137
Book recommendations, author interviews, editors' picks, and more. Read it now
Customers who bought this item also bought
Editorial Reviews
Review
The book's title belies its fierce politics: like Sanders, Srinivasan believes that massive tech companies have grown unaccountably powerful and must be confronted, not courted and appeased as the Democratic Party establishment has done for decades.
—Jacobin—About the Author
Product details
- Publisher : The MIT Press
- Publication date : October 29, 2019
- Edition : Illustrated
- Language : English
- Print length : 424 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0262043130
- ISBN-13 : 978-0262043137
- Item Weight : 1.6 pounds
- Dimensions : 6.31 x 1.27 x 9.31 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #3,249,466 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #783 in Social Aspects of Technology
- #2,421 in Internet & Telecommunications
- #3,794 in Internet & Social Media
About the author

Ramesh Srinivasan studies the relationship between technology, politics, culture, and societies across the world. He has been a faculty member at UCLA since 2005 in the Information Studies and Design|Media Arts departments. He is the founder of the UC-wide Digital Cultures Lab, exploring the meaning of technology worldwide as it spreads to the far reaches of our world. He is also the author of the book “Whose Global Village? Rethinking How Technology Impacts Our World” with NYU Press, and "After the Internet" (forthcoming) with Polity Press.
Srinivasan earned his Ph.D. in design studies at Harvard; his master’s degree in media arts and science at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology; and his bachelor’s degree in industrial engineering at Stanford. He has served fellowships in MIT’s Media Laboratory in Cambridge and the MIT Media Lab Asia. He has also been a teaching fellow at the Graduate School of Design and Department of Visual and Environmental Design at Harvard.
Srinivasan is a regular speaker for TEDx Talks, and makes regular media appearances on NPR, Al Jazeera, “The Young Turks,” and Public Radio International. His writings have been widely published by Al Jazeera English, The Washington Post, and The Huffington Post.






