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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.
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.