One of the most optimistic books about the Internet I've ever read because it dares to hope for better. Another online life is possible, but first we have to destroy the one we're trapped in. A blisteringly good, urgent, essential read (Zadie Smith)
Jaron Lanier’s writing on technology and its cultural significance is indispensable and he has surpassed himself in this book on social media. Everyone who wants to understand the digital world, its pitfalls and possibilities should read this book – now (Matthew d'Ancona, author of Post-Truth)
Everybody should read this book, immediately. It is a witty and fiercely intelligent attack on the ethics and business model of big tech and a romping read to boot. Lanier is a modern day Luther, calling for a digital reformation and nailing his theses to the door (Tom Hodgkinson, The Idler)
A short, snappy, impassioned takedown of the surveillance capitalism operated by the giant Silicon Valley corporations (Financial Times)
Everything is here, from status anxiety, to wage degradation, to the death of context ... This is Lanier at his best, taking the language of the internet and turning it back on itself (Hugo Rifkind, The Times)
An eloquence that is hard to argue against ... The system deployed by the social media giants, he says, is nothing short of a weapon of mass social destruction, and his conviction is based on his insider knowledge ... Every time you log on, you are adding to a fire that is burning your house down. So delete your accounts (Danny Fortson, Sunday Times)