Buy new:
-33% $25.29$25.29
Delivery Thursday, January 16
Ships from: Amazon Sold by: Book-center
Save with Used - Good
$15.84$15.84
$15.99 delivery
Ships from: Amazon Sold by: Austin Book Store
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
The Age of Surveillance Capitalism: The Fight for a Human Future at the New Frontier of Power Hardcover – January 15, 2019
Purchase options and add-ons
The heady optimism of the Internet’s early days has turned dark. Surveillance capitalism has deepened inequality, sown societal chaos, and undermined democracy.
The fight for a human future has never been more urgent. Shoshana Zuboff argues that we still have the power to decide what kind of world we want to live in: Will we allow surveillance capitalism to wrap us in its iron cage as it enriches the few and subjugates the many? Or will we demand the rights and laws that place this rogue power under the democratic rule of law? Only democracy can ensure that the vast new capabilities of the digital era are harnessed to the advancement of humanity. The Age of Surveillance Capitalism is a deeply original, exquisitely reasoned, and spell binding examination of our emerging information civilization and the life and death choices we face.
- Print length704 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherPublicAffairs
- Publication dateJanuary 15, 2019
- Dimensions6.65 x 2.35 x 9.55 inches
- ISBN-101610395697
- ISBN-13978-1610395694
Book recommendations, author interviews, editors' picks, and more. Read it now.
Explore your book, then jump right back to where you left off with Page Flip.
View high quality images that let you zoom in to take a closer look.
Enjoy features only possible in digital – start reading right away, carry your library with you, adjust the font, create shareable notes and highlights, and more.
Discover additional details about the events, people, and places in your book, with Wikipedia integration.
Frequently bought together

Similar items that ship from close to you
Surveillance capitalism unilaterally claims human experience as free raw material for translation into behavioral data.Highlighted by 2,615 Kindle readers
Instrumentarian power knows and shapes human behavior toward others’ ends.Highlighted by 1,886 Kindle readers
Surveillance capitalism’s actual customers are the enterprises that trade in its markets for future behavior.Highlighted by 1,871 Kindle readers
From the Publisher
Editorial Reviews
Review
A New York Times Notable Book of the Year
A Financial Times Best Book of the Year
A Sunday Times (UK) Best Business Book of the Year
Selected by Barack Obama, Zadie Smith (in the Wall Street Journal), Jia Tolentino (in the
New Yorker), Elif Shafak (in the Guardian), and Ana Botin (in Bloomberg) as one of the
best books of 2019
Finalist for the Financial Times/McKinsey Best Book of the Year Award
“If a book’s importance is gauged by how effectively it describes the world we’re in, and how much potential it has to change said world, then in my view it’s easily the most important book to be published this century... Zuboff is concerned with the largest act of capitalist colonisation ever attempted, but the colonisation is of our minds, our behaviour, our free will, our very selves. Yet it’s not an anti‑tech book. It’s anti unregulated capitalism, red in tooth and claw. It’s really this generation’s Das Kapital.”―Zadie Smith
“Extraordinarily intelligent... Absorbing Zuboff’s methodical determination, the way she pieces together sundry examples into this comprehensive work of scholarship and synthesis, requires patience, but the rewards are considerable ‑ a heightened sense of awareness, and a deeper appreciation of what’s at stake. A business model that seeks growth by cataloging our ‘every move, emotion, utterance and desire’ is too radical to be taken for granted. As Zuboff repeatedly says near the end of the book, ‘It is not O.K.’”―Jennifer Szalai, New York Times
“The rare volume that puts a name on a problem just as it becomes critical... This book’s major contribution is to give a name to what’s happening, to put it in cultural and historical perspective, and to ask us to pause long enough to think about the future and how it might be different from today.”―Frank Rose, Wall Street Journal
“Many adjectives could be used to describe Shoshana Zuboff’s latest book: groundbreaking, magisterial, alarming, alarmist, preposterous. One will do: unmissable... As we grope around in the darkness trying to grasp the contours of our digital era, The Age of Surveillance Capitalism shines a searing light on how this latest revolution is transforming our economy, politics, society ‑ and lives.”―John Thornhill, Financial Times
“One of the most important criticisms of the power of Big Tech.”―Rana Foroohar, Financial Times
“The most ambitious attempt yet to paint the bigger picture and to explain how the effects of digitisation that we are now experiencing as individuals and citizens have come about... A continuation of a tradition that includes Adam Smith, Max Weber, Karl Polanyi and‑dare I say it‑Karl Marx... A striking and illuminating book.”―The Observer
“Shoshana Zuboff’s The Age of Surveillance Capitalism is already drawing comparisons to seminal socioeconomic investigations like Rachel Carson’s Silent Spring and Karl Marx’s Capital. Zuboff’s book deserves these comparisons and more: Like the former, it’s an alarming exposé about how business interests have poisoned our world, and like the latter, it provides a framework to understand and combat that poison. But The Age of Surveillance Capitalism, named for the now‑popular term Zuboff herself coined five years ago, is also a masterwork of horror. It’s hard to recall a book that left me as haunted as Zuboff’s, with its descriptions of the gothic algorithmic daemons that follow us at nearly every instant of every hour of every day to suck us dry of metadata. Even those who’ve made an effort to track the technology that tracks us over the last decade or so will be chilled to their core by Zuboff, unable to look at their surroundings the same way.”―Sam Biddle, The Intercept
“A definitive, stunning analysis of how digital giants like Google, Facebook, etc. have single‑mindedly pursued data on human behavior as fodder for generating predictions and shaping outcomes salable to advertisers and others...The scope of her analysis is extraordinary; in addition to covering philosophical, social, and political implications she discusses needed privacy regulation...This book is pathbreaking, illuminating, and unnerving.”―Choice
“Chilling and essential.”―Globe And Mail
“A book that no tech industry official will want the American public to read... One of the true joys of this insanely brilliant, deeply unsettling book is how fluidly Ms. Zuboff’s style incorporates jargon, analogy, research and memoir.”―Pittsburgh Post Gazette
“Eye‑opening...she raises questions about businesses that mine personal data, manipulate our desires for instantaneous information, and encourage us to narcissistically display our egos and foibles on social media platforms.”―San Antonio Express News
“Staggeringly brilliant.”―Winnipeg Free Press
“A warning bell, sounded clearly for both the people in danger and of those with the power to do something to keep them safe... a truly sobering shock to the system, a call for ordinary people to re‑assert control before it’s too late.”―The National (UAE)
“An original and often brilliant work, and it arrives at a crucial moment, when the public and its elected representatives are at last grappling with the extraordinary power of digital media and the companies that control it. Like another recent masterwork of economic analysis, Thomas Piketty’s 2013 Capital in the Twenty‑First Century, the book challenges assumptions, raises uncomfortable questions about the present and future, and stakes out ground for a necessary and overdue debate. Shoshana Zuboff has aimed an unsparing light onto the shadowy new landscape of our lives. The picture is not pretty.”―Nicholas Carr, Los Angeles Review of Books
“An intensively researched, engagingly written chronicle of surveillance capitalism’s origins and its deleterious prospects for our society... [Zuboff’s] after something bigger, providing a scaffolding of critical thinking from which to examine the great crises of the digital age... This is the rare book that we should trust to lead us down the long hard road of understanding.”―Jacob Silverman, New York Times Book Review
“From the very first page I was consumed with an overwhelming imperative: everyone needs to read this book as an act of digital self‑defense. With tremendous lucidity and moral courage, Zuboff demonstrates not only how our minds are being mined for data but also how they are being rapidly and radically changed in the process. The hour is late and much has been lost already‑but as we learn in these indispensable pages, there is still hope for emancipation.”―Naomi Klein, author of This Changes Everything
“The Age of Surveillance Capitalism is brilliant and essential. Shoshana Zuboff reveals capitalism’s most dangerous frontier with stunning clarity: The new economic order of surveillance capitalism founded on extreme inequalities of knowledge and power. Her sweeping analysis demonstrates the unprecedented challenges to human autonomy, social solidarity, and democracy perpetrated by this rogue capitalism. Zuboff’s book finally empowers us to understand and fight these threats effectively‑‑a masterpiece of rare conceptual daring, beautifully written and deeply urgent.”―Robert B. Reich, author of Saving Capitalism
“Zuboff’s expansive, erudite, deeply‑researched exploration of digital futures elucidates the norms and hidden terminal goals of information‑intensive industries. Zuboff’s book is the information industry’s Silent Spring."―Chris Hoofnagle, University of California, Berkeley
“My mind is blown on every page by the depth of Shoshana’s research, the breadth of her knowledge, the rigor of her intellect, and finally by the power of her arguments. I’m not sure we can end the age of surveillance capitalism without her help, and that’s why I believe this is the most important book of our time.”―Doc Searls, editor in chief, Linux Journal
“In the future, if people still read books, they will view this as the classic study of how everything changed. The Age of Surveillance Capitalism is a masterpiece that stunningly reveals the essence of twenty‑first‑century society, and offers a dire warning about technology gone awry that we ignore at our peril. Shoshana Zuboff has somehow escaped from the fishbowl in which we all now live, and introduced to us the concept of water. A work of penetrating intellect, this is also a deeply human book about what is becoming, as it relentlessly demonstrates, a dangerously inhuman time.”―Kevin Werbach, The Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania
“A panoramic exploration of one of the most urgent issues of our times, Zuboff reinterprets contemporary capitalism through the prism of the digital revolution, producing a book of immense ambition and erudition. Zuboff is one of our most prescient and profound thinkers on the rise of the digital. In an age of inane Twitter soundbites and narcissistic Facebook posts, Zuboff’s serious scholarship is great cause for celebration.”―Andrew Keen, author of How to Fix the Future
“Zuboff is a strikingly original voice, simultaneously bold and wise, eloquent and passionate, learned and accessible. Read this book to understand the inner workings of today’s digital capitalism, its threats to twenty‑first century society, and the reforms we must make for a better tomorrow.”―Frank Pasquale, University of Maryland Carey School of Law
“Shoshana Zuboff has produced the most provocative compelling moral framework thus far for understanding the new realities of our digital environment and its anti‑democratic threats. From now on, all serious writings on the internet and society will have to take into account with The Age of Surveillance Capitalism.”―Joseph Turow, Annenberg School, University of Pennsylvania
“The defining challenge for the future of the market economy is the concentration of data, knowledge, and surveillance power. Not just our privacy but our individuality is at stake, and this very readable and thought‑provoking book alerts us to these existential dangers. Highly recommended.”―Daron Acemoglu, co-author of Why Nations Fail
“I will make a guarantee: Assuming we survive to tell the tale, The Age of Surveillance Capitalism has a high probability of joining the likes Adam Smith’s The Wealth of Nations and Max Weber’s Economy and Society as defining social‑economics texts of modern times. It is not a ‘quick read;’ it is to be savored and re‑read and discussed with colleagues and friends. No zippy one‑liners from me, except to almost literally beg you to read/ingest this book.”―Tom Peters, co-author of In Search of Excellence
About the Author
Product details
- Publisher : PublicAffairs; 1st edition (January 15, 2019)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 704 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1610395697
- ISBN-13 : 978-1610395694
- Item Weight : 2.08 pounds
- Dimensions : 6.65 x 2.35 x 9.55 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #80,747 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #20 in Privacy & Surveillance in Society
- #43 in Free Enterprise & Capitalism
- #84 in Social Aspects of Technology
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Discover more of the author’s books, see similar authors, read book recommendations and more.
Related products with free delivery on eligible orders
Customer reviews
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzed reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find the book informative and insightful. They appreciate the depth of information and analysis on surveillance capitalism. Many consider it a valuable read and well worth the money. The material quality is described as good and well-crafted. However, some readers feel the length is too long and difficult to read.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers find the book easy to read and engaging. They say it's an important and eye-opening read about technology's social effects. The content is erudite and analytical for smart readers, providing a thought-provoking overview of technology's social effects, making it relevant for anyone in the IT industry.
"One of the most important books I've ever read in my 63 years...." Read more
"...This topic is so important , so far reaching and of such great importance that it requires literary expansiveness to fully do justice to these points..." Read more
"This is a very important book which alerts us to the dangers of losing our privacy, independent decision-making and democracy in the impending age..." Read more
"...This is an opus...." Read more
Customers find the book provides a thorough analysis of modern technology and its potential threats to human liberty. They appreciate the author's innovative argument and consider it an important work that captures existing projects and ambitions. Readers also mention it's packed with stunning revelations about what big tech is up to.
"...Big book, packed with stunning reveals about what big tech is up to and over 100 pages of well documented notes...." Read more
"...This topic is so important , so far reaching and of such great importance that it requires literary expansiveness to fully do justice to these points..." Read more
"..."cookies" to track our online browsing, the next step is pervasive emotion scanning and emotional analytics based on our "likes" , recordings of our..." Read more
"Pros: 1. This book is very informative and the information is supported by research data. 2...." Read more
Customers find the book provides relevant information about surveillance. They appreciate its timely analysis of the threat to personal privacy, including Google Streetview and Roomba. Overall, readers praise the book's breadth of insight and courage to redefine the threat to human privacy and sovereignty.
"...Still, the examples of sheer data robbery (Google Streetview and Roomba among many) are revolting and speak for themselves, and those make the book..." Read more
"There was so much to learn in this book about capital surveillance. I learned the ins and outs of the system, and still going back to read more...." Read more
"...stunned me in its breadth of insight and courage to redefine the threat to Human Privacy and Sovereignty...." Read more
"...well researched and meticulously written book that opened my eyes to the practice of surveillance and how that practice is connected to capitalism...." Read more
Customers find the book provides good value for money. They mention it's worth reading, and discusses the cost of convenience versus security and privacy.
"Will take a while to read, but well worth it. The paperback has small print, ordered the hardcover to see if it's any better...." Read more
"...from almost every angle: political, personal, social, cultural, economic...." Read more
"...The documentation supplied in her footnotes is worth the price of the book, but, while she makes many good points, I feel that she overcompensates..." Read more
"Surprise: There’s a huge price to pay When Big Business can track you each day. “Don’t blame us,” tech said, “that your privacy fled.”..." Read more
Customers find the book has good material and is well-crafted. They say it contains all the important information needed for their bachelor's degrees. However, some readers feel the book needs a stronger editing.
"...I like the style and think it is well crafted...." Read more
"...it for my monography to finish my bachelor degree, it has all the material I needed, it was an excellent complement to the other author I used to..." Read more
"arrived quickly and in great condition!!!!!=)" Read more
"This book needs a strong and forceful Editor..." Read more
Customers have different views on the book's readability. Some find it well-written and easy to understand, describing it as an important critique of surveillance capitalism. Others find the writing ponderous and hard to follow, with excessive language that makes it difficult to see the big picture.
"...stunning reveals about what big tech is up to and over 100 pages of well documented notes...." Read more
"Will take a while to read, but well worth it. The paperback has small print, ordered the hardcover to see if it's any better...." Read more
"...so far reaching and of such great importance that it requires literary expansiveness to fully do justice to these points...." Read more
"...It was a struggle to get through this book, but it is worth reading because it is important for people to know what technology companies are doing." Read more
Customers have different views on the book's scariness level. Some find the basic premise accurate and alarming, while others find it too alarmist and disturbing.
"...Great quote, and rather powerful scary stuff, but the problem is the Zuck said no such thing...." Read more
"The information in this book is disturbing because it is true. How can our government sit back and act like this is okay. We have no privacy...." Read more
"...Her investigation of big tech and social media are alarming and comprehensive. The bibliography is staggering in scope...." Read more
"very alarmist and parenoidal take on the age social technology, that she us referring to as SurveillanceCapitalism...." Read more
Customers find the book too long and difficult to understand. They say the sentences are rarely short, elegant, or clear. The size of the book has scared away friends and family from reading it.
"...When it arrived I realized this was an undertaking, the book is long, dense and deals with complicated issues...." Read more
"...The book is long, because the author is forced to describe the historical changes that democracy, capitalism, and society have gone through in order..." Read more
"...I'm a trained speed-reader and I found this tediously long...." Read more
"...For this reason the book is long, and at times repetitive...." Read more
Reviews with images
Don’t be intimidated by its 600 pages. It reads fluidly.
Top reviews from the United States
There was a problem filtering reviews right now. Please try again later.
- Reviewed in the United States on November 1, 2024One of the most important books I've ever read in my 63 years. Big book, packed with stunning reveals about what big tech is up to and over 100 pages of well documented notes. Dr. Zuboff nailed it with this critique of surveillance capitalism and their version of "behavior modification for guaranteed outcomes." Think about what that really means. Scary, very scary but you need to read this book to get the horrifying details. You won't want to put it down.
- Reviewed in the United States on June 17, 2023The subject matter covered in this book was an interest of mine, so I bought this with great anticipation. When it arrived I realized this was an undertaking, the book is long, dense and deals with complicated issues. Within 100 pages I was pleased with my decision. By 200 I was mesmerized and totally taken in by this masterful work.
The subject matter is simultaneously granular (like something as close to me as my hand) and beyond the scope of my comprehension (like a galaxy so far away no telescope can view it). But Dr. Zuboffs ability to take the reader down a pathway of insight and learning is masterful and a gift which I wish I possessed. Don't get me wrong this book is longgggg. But unlike what some reviewers have said about it being too long - I would take a different point of view. This topic is so important , so far reaching and of such great importance that it requires literary expansiveness to fully do justice to these points. The manner in which she weaves together seemingly unconnected events into a shockingly clear picture of just how manipulated we are by the companies controlling our online experience is masterful. Her understanding of the topic and the ability to provide the reader with a clear understanding of the manipulative nature of social media and big tech in general is evident. The conclusions one draws at the end are (IMHO) a chilling and sad indictment of where humanity has come and for what the future holds. She takes the reader on a journey of discovery and understanding. I truly enjoyed this book
- Reviewed in the United States on May 7, 2020This is a very important book which alerts us to the dangers of losing our privacy, independent decision-making and democracy in the impending age of Surveillance. The digital age promised to give us a world of personalized information, communication, shopping and entertainment at our finger-tips and we were enticed by the prospect of instant gratification. At the same time we were completely unaware that more and more private information about our habits, likes and dislikes was being mined from our internet searches and sold off to the highest bidder. Shoshana Zuboff traces this intriguing story of the step by step transformation of what was to be an age of personalized information into an age of surveillance. Apple's iTunes Store was opened in 2003 and quickly became the world's largest online music service, with over 25 billion downloads by 2013. Personalized digital music was here to stay. Google set out to make profits from its personalized Adwords and Adsense after its Search application proved immensely successful with its users but generated no revenue. While learning to improve predictions of user clicks and "likes", Google and later Facebook discovered a gold-mine in trading user's behavioral surplus, which turned both companies into "fortune-telling giants" "This was all based on accumulating more and more user data because" Google’s machine intelligence capabilities feed on behavioral surplus, and the more surplus they consume, the more accurate the prediction products that result" Serving its users was no longer Google's main priority but became a means to a far more lucrative end .Our lives became the raw materials for this new process of production.
Shoshan Zuboff writes "Google would no longer mine behavioral data strictly to improve service for users but rather to read users’ minds for the purposes of matching ads to their interests, as those interests are deduced from the collateral traces of online behavior. With Google’s unique access to behavioral data, it would now be possible to know what a particular individual in a particular time and place was thinking, feeling, and doing." This "digital dispossession" took place in secret and paved the way to more ambitious goals which pried much deeper into the details of our offline lives. Larry Page, one of the co-founders of Google expressed it this way :"
"People will generate enormous amounts of data. . . . Everything you’ve ever heard or seen or experienced will become searchable. Your whole life will be searchable.” With Google Maps and Street View privacy has been further reduced.
After "cookies" to track our online browsing, the next step is pervasive emotion scanning and emotional analytics based on our "likes" , recordings of our voice and our facial expressions. This is not science fiction. At least one company, Emoshape.. produces a microchip which delivers “high performance machine emotion awareness” which.. can classify twelve emotions with up to 98 percent accuracy." In addition "Samsung acknowledges that the voice commands aimed at triggering the TV’s voice-recognition capabilities are sent to a third party". There are now toy dolls that can spy on us, robot floor cleaners that sell our floor plans to third parties and its getting more and more difficult to opt out because even if you can read and understand the complicated click-through agreements which manufacturers provide and opt out of the right to sell your information to third parties, you end up with degraded products with much reduced functionality.
The technology of surveillance advances much faster than legislation and since 911 governments have been more desperate to catch terrorists than protect privacy. Cyberspace has become the new "wild west" a lawless frontier.
The next two stages are even more frightening: "ubiquitous computing" and behavioral control. Ex Ceo of Google, Schmidt sees the internet disappearing in future because sensors and devices will be everywhere including wearables and the walls of every room so we will be permanently online. Behavioral control starts with little nudges to manipulate us and "fake news" that has already swayed our election results. The Pokemon game showed a way to nudge users to particular locations where businesses would pay for each visit .In future we will have individual insurance policies based on monitoring our driving with sensors, and then giving reduced premiums to careful drivers while switching off the engine of dangerous drivers .Maybe we will have fridges that automatically shut to prevent gluttony because we are overweight. There is also the Microsoft automatic factory which integrates machine and human behavior automatizing both.
There is no doubt that Shoshana Zuboff is right about the need for action and legislation to preserve our freedom before it is too late. Unfortunately, having presented all the facts, she dwarfs the real problem with ideology by claiming that surveillance capitalism is the major problem, a vampire devised to exploit us and impoverish us by giving an unfair advantage to rogue capitalists who distort the classic market (where the future is unknown) by manipulating consumers and employing so few workers. She writes "Most startling is that GM employed more people during the height of the Great Depression than either Google or Facebook employs at their heights of market capitalization." It makes no sense to blame Google and Facebook who pay higher wages than other companies for contributing towards the increasing inequality of income in capitalist societies in the last 50 years. Automation is probably the main cause of depressing wage incomes and increasing income from capital. The surveillance economy is still a very small part of our economy and cannot be blamed for all the unrest of the last 50 years. She writes: "The surveillance capitalists reverse the normal sequence of theory and practice. Their practices move ahead at high velocity in the absence of an explicit and contestable theory. The only way to grasp the theory advanced in their applied utopistics is to reverse engineer their operations and scrutinize their meaning, as we have done throughout these chapters." In other words, she uses the very absence of an ideology or guiding theory in surveillance capitalism to justify inventing one, using the predictions of a few leading data scientists. Since Plato's concept of philosopher kings, there have always been some philosophers, writers and now scientists who preferred enlightened despotism to democracy. This doesn't entitle Shoshana Zuboff to marry Skinner's ideas of totalitarian rule by scientists (for the "greater good") to surveillance capitalism in general.
Even worse, the few pages that this book devotes to the surveillance state and its foremost exemplary China are enough to show that real totalitarianism is very easy to spot. This brings me to my most important criticism of this book. We are in danger of living in a surveillance society and every crisis in this overcrowded world, like the corona crisis brings solutions which further encroach on our privacy (e.g a health passport) with more personal monitoring. There are too many reasons to use surveillance technology which are not connected to the profit motive. The Chinese are already living in a state where your every move is surveyed by camera and you are granted a social grade for your behavior. Adopting unsuitable friends can lower your social grade which will block you from buying a train ticket. At the end of the day, the problem is not an economic one of "surveillance capitalism" but how to avoid the encroachment of surveillance on all aspects of our life and preserve our rights to privacy and democracy.
Top reviews from other countries
Immor-Tali-tyReviewed in Canada on September 4, 20245.0 out of 5 stars This is the most important book I have read this entire decade.
None have come close to the significance of this book. Zuboff is a brilliant and gifted writer. She explains that surveillance capitalism is not satisfied with just commoditizing our experiences; it also seeks to control and direct our behaviour through predictive algorithms. This unprecedented threat has shifted from a totalitarian “Big Brother” state to instrumentation architecture: a “Big Other” operating in the interests of surveillance capitalism. She suggests that surveillance capitalism is more insidious than market capitalism, where the means of production are subordinated to an increasingly complex and widespread means of behavioural modification. Vast wealth and power are accumulated from our behavioural surplus, which is done at the expense of democracy, freedom, and humanity. This book had quite a lot of overlap with some of the other books and articles I read about algorithms, capitalism, and datafication, but it presented them in a much more comprehensive, complete, and frankly anxiety-inducing way.
JackReviewed in the United Kingdom on August 9, 20235.0 out of 5 stars Really important and worth the effort...
I think this is a really important book which everyone should try to read.
I am only a third of the way through and already I am looking at everything I do on the internet (or with my mobile phone) differently.
But I will say it isn't an easy read. Professor Zuboff's prose is weighty and academic with plenty of semantics and the early chapters felt like being back at university and pretending to understand books about Marxist theory. But after about the 130-page mark, I found it became suddenly compelling - whether because the narrative had moved up a gear, or because I had acclimatised to Zuboff's prose, I can't say.
Some may find it unfinishable, but I'd say it's worth the effort. It begins with how Google invented the surveillance capitalism model as a means to monetise its search product and quickly grew into a frighteningly weaponised behemoth whose surveillance model Facebook then ISPs like Verizon sought to replicate, at the expense of our privacy and (in Zuboff's view) humanity.
Already, I have learned about surveillance technologies I never even imagined existed and have changed some online behaviours (eg. by never 'clicking through' Google ads to a vendor's website). I get the feeling I haven't got on to the worst stuff yet (eg. the social and political impacts of this model) and of course, fast-moving surveillance capitalists have had four or more years to continue weaving their webs of incursion since this book was written. Read it - but be prepared to persevere for the first hundred pages!
-
PonchoReviewed in Mexico on March 29, 20215.0 out of 5 stars Muy buen libro.
Excelente libro para entender como fue posible que llegamos a esta situación .
El libro turn un buen marco teórico e histórico pero puede que los tecnicismos y teorías de la autora hagan pesado y largo el libro.
Sin lugar a dudas lo mejor es la cronología de los hechos que en su tiempo fueron difundidos a través de noticias con poca difusión , pero la autora las ha compilado muy bien , estos hechos poco documentados nos han orillado a perder nuestra privacidad y nosotros siempre lo autorizábamos
-
L. D. S.Reviewed in Italy on August 11, 20245.0 out of 5 stars Lettura necessaria per capire i rischi che corre la società moderna.
L'analisi della Zuboff dei modi con i quali una manciata di società - aiutata da un manipolo di scienziati senza etica - si adopera per cercare il controllo della società a proprio esclusivo vantaggio è molto dettagliata e penetrante. I rischi sono evidenti, ma da un lato le stesse società offrono numerosi specchietti per le allodole, dall'altro la politica è molto sensibile alle lobby piene di soldi, e non disdegna potenti mezzi di propaganda. Zuboff indica anche le possibili soluzione, che partono però da una vera comprensione del problema.
Nota per Amazon: perché mi consigliate articoli che dipendono da dove sono, nonostante il posizionamento sia per di più disabilitato?? Ho comprato questo libro su Amazon, e non ho nulla in contrario all'e-commerce, ma al tracciamento e analisi dei dati personali sì.
Luciana BauerReviewed in Brazil on September 29, 20205.0 out of 5 stars An Extraordinary Book
an extraordinary and fundamental book to understand the current times and the implications of unregulated algorithms in our lives and in the degeneration of democracy







