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EbookBell Team
4.3
8 reviewsThe internet was supposed to be a thing of revolutions. As that dream curdles, there is no shortage of villains to blame–from tech giants to Russian bot farms. But what if the problem is not an issue of bad actors ruining a good thing? What if the hazards of the internet are built into the system itself?
That’s what journalist James Ball argues as he takes us to the root of the problem, from the very establishment of the internet’s earliest protocols to the cables that wire it together. He shows us how the seemingly abstract & pervasive phenomenon is built on a very real set of materials & rules that are owned, financed, designed & regulated by very real people.
In this urgent & necessary book, Ball reveals that the internet is not a neutral force but a massive infrastructure that reflects the society that created it. And making it work for–and not against–us must be an endeavor of the people as well.
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James Ball has worked in political, data, & investigative journalism for the Guardian, BuzzFeed, & the Washington Post in a career spanning TV, digital, print, & alternative media. His reporting has won the Pulitzer Prize for public service, the Scripps Howard Prize, the British Journalism Award for investigative reporting, the Royal Statistical Society Award, & the Laurence Stern Fellowship, among others.