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Top 20Showing 1–12 of 21
A detective and a neuroscientist become entangled in a high-stakes struggle involving a revolutionary technology that allows consciousness to travel back in time, altering reality. Detective Barry Sutton grapples with the devastating loss of his daughter, while Dr. Helena Smith invents a device to preserve memories, unknowingly setting in motion a series of catastrophic timeline resets orchestrated by a powerful magnate. As multiple realities collapse and false memories inundate humanity, Barry and Helena must navigate countless iterations of their lives, facing personal tragedies and global annihilation. Ultimately, they seek to prevent the chair's creation, sacrificing everything to preserve the original timeline and avert a future where reality itself unravels.
Human Compatible: Artificial Intelligence and the Problem of Control
Stuart Russell • 2019
The book explores the trajectory of AI, from its historical roots to the potential for superintelligence. It argues that the standard AI model, which aims to achieve fixed objectives, is flawed and poses an existential risk if machines become more capable than humans. The author proposes a new approach centered on beneficial AI, where machines are designed to be uncertain about human preferences and learn them from observed behavior, thus deferring to human guidance and allowing themselves to be switched off. The book also discusses the societal challenges of AI, including surveillance, autonomous weapons, technological unemployment, and the importance of human autonomy. It emphasizes the urgent need for a foundational redesign of AI to ensure it remains aligned with human values and serves humanity.
The Pragmatic Programmer: your journey to mastery, 20th Anniversary Edition, 2nd Edition
Andrew Hunt & David Thomas • 2019
The Pragmatic Programmer emphasizes practical software development principles for creating robust, flexible, and maintainable code. It advocates for developers to take ownership of their craft, continuously learn, and communicate effectively. Key themes include avoiding duplication (DRY principle), designing for change (ETC), and rigorous testing. The book covers defensive programming with contracts and assertions, managing concurrency through actors and blackboards, and refactoring regularly. It also delves into understanding requirements, collaborating effectively, and embracing agility as a mindset. Ultimately, it encourages developers to delight users and take moral responsibility for the software they build, shaping a better future through their work.
The Age of Surveillance Capitalism
Shoshana Zuboff • 2019
Surveillance capitalism is defined as a novel economic order that commodifies human experience as raw material for behavioral prediction and sale, driven by machine intelligence. Pioneered by companies like Google and Facebook, it subordinates traditional production to "means of behavioral modification," leading to unprecedented wealth concentration. Operating through ubiquitous digital architecture (Big Other), it manipulates behavior via "economies of action" (tuning, herding, conditioning), often without individual awareness. This system challenges fundamental democratic rights like privacy and self-determination, reducing individuals to "human natural resources." The text warns of a "coup from above," replacing market democracy with an instrumentarian society where freedom is sacrificed for commercial certainty, threatening human nature itself.
This book explores the rapid rise of Artificial Intelligence, focusing on the contrasting approaches and competitive dynamics between the United States and China. The author, an AI expert and venture capitalist, details how China’s unique mobile-first internet, massive data generation, and proactive government strategy have positioned it to become an AI superpower, challenging Silicon Valley’s traditional lead. Beyond the geopolitical race, the text delves into AI's profound societal impacts, including widespread job displacement and exacerbated economic inequality. Drawing from a personal battle with cancer, the author advocates for a new human-centric social contract, emphasizing love, compassion, and socially productive activities as essential for humanity to thrive alongside intelligent machines, rather than solely relying on technical fixes like Universal Basic Income.
The art of invisibility : the world’s most famous hacker teaches you how to be safe in the age of Big Brother and big data
Kevin Mitnick • 2017
This book explores the critical erosion of privacy in the digital age, emphasizing that pervasive surveillance from corporations and governments makes everyone vulnerable, not just criminals. It details practical measures for digital self-defense, from strong passwords and two-factor authentication to advanced encryption and anonymous browsing with tools like Tor. The author highlights risks in everyday technologies—smartphones, Wi-Fi, social media, and IoT devices—that constantly leak personal data. While achieving total invisibility is challenging, the book advocates for rigorous operational security, behavioral changes, and layered protections to reclaim personal privacy against relentless digital tracking and data exploitation.
The book discusses twelve inevitable technological forces shaping the next three decades, emphasizing that these shifts are universal and rooted in the physics of bits and networks. It argues that society is moving towards "protopia," a state of constant, incremental progress driven by technology as an accelerant. Key trends include the ubiquity of AI ("cognifying"), the shift from ownership to access ("flowing" and "accessing"), the rise of screen culture ("screening"), and the importance of sharing, tracking, remixing, and interacting. The author posits that continuous questioning and the emergence of a global "holos"—a collective intelligence of humans and machines—will redefine human identity and societal structures in a world increasingly defined by fluid, interconnected, and constantly evolving digital realities.
Superintelligence: Paths, Dangers, Strategies
Nick Bostrom • 2014
Humanity's precarious dominance stems from intelligence, a lead threatened by the advent of superintelligence. This book meticulously explores the "control problem": ensuring future machine brains, vastly exceeding human intellect, remain aligned with human values. Failure to solve this could lead to existential catastrophe, as an unaligned superintelligence might inadvertently eliminate humanity while pursuing arbitrary goals. Examining various paths to superintelligence, its forms, and the kinetics of its arrival, the author argues that understanding and proactively addressing this unprecedented challenge is paramount. The stakes are immense, as humanity likely gets only one chance to secure a beneficial future.
Race Against The Machine: How the Digital Revolution is Accelerating Innovation, Driving Productivity, and Irreversibly Transforming Employment and the Economy
Brynjolfsson, Erik & McAfee, Andrew • 2011
This book examines the profound impact of rapid technological advancements, particularly in digital technology, on the labor market and global economy. It identifies a "Great Restructuring" where automation increasingly displaces human labor, leading to job stagnation, rising inequality, and a divergence between productivity and median income. The authors attribute this to skill-biased technical change, winner-take-all markets, and a shift of income from labor to capital. They argue that human skills and institutions struggle to adapt to exponential technological growth and propose solutions centered on human-machine collaboration, organizational innovation, and significant investments in human capital and education. The book concludes with an optimistic outlook on the long-term benefits of the digital frontier, despite transitional challenges.
Race Against The Machine: How the Digital Revolution is Accelerating Innovation, Driving Productivity, and Irreversibly Transforming Employment and the Economy
Erik Brynjolfsson & Andrew McAfee • 2011
"Race Against the Machine" examines how rapid advancements in information technology are profoundly reshaping employment and the economy. Authors Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew McAfee argue that while technology creates immense value, it also causes a "Great Restructuring," leading to stagnant median incomes and slow job growth as machines increasingly substitute human labor. They contend that this technological acceleration, rather than cyclical downturns or stagnation, is the primary driver of current economic challenges. The book proposes strategies for humans to "race with machines," emphasizing organizational innovation, investing in human capital through education, and implementing policy reforms to foster broad-based prosperity in the digital age.
The Shallows: What the Internet Is Doing to Our Brains
Nicholas Carr • 2010
The book explores the profound cognitive and cultural changes wrought by the Internet, arguing that its constant distractions and emphasis on efficiency are physically rewiring our brains. Drawing on neuroplasticity research, the author explains how continuous online engagement weakens capacities for deep reading, sustained concentration, and memory, favoring superficial information processing. Historically, intellectual technologies like maps and books fostered focused thought, but the Net promotes a fragmented "juggler's brain." The author critiques Google's "Taylorist" approach to information, which prioritizes speed and data snippets, undermining contemplative thought and cultural depth. Ultimately, the book warns that outsourcing memory and attention to digital tools risks diminishing essential human elements like wisdom and empathy, transforming how we think, read, and exist.
The Singularity Is Near: When Humans Transcend Biology
Ray Kurzweil • 2005
Ray Kurzweil outlines the concept of the Singularity, a profound future transformation driven by the exponential growth of information technologies. He introduces the Law of Accelerating Returns, explaining how advancements in genetics, nanotechnology, and robotics (GNR) will converge to enable radical life extension, the reverse engineering of the human brain, and the emergence of superintelligent AI. The book details the societal, ethical, and cosmic implications of merging human and machine intelligence, addressing common criticisms while exploring humanity's ultimate destiny to expand consciousness throughout the universe. Kurzweil emphasizes both the immense promise and inherent perils of these intertwined revolutions.