Jaron Lanier is known as the father of virtual reality
technology and has worked on the interface between computer science
and medicine, physics, and neuroscience. He lives in Berkeley,
California.
Visit the author's website at www.jaronlanier.com.
A New York Times, Los Angeles Times, and Boston Globe
Bestseller
“Lucid, powerful and persuasive. . . . Necessary reading for anyone
interested in how the Web and the software we use every day are
reshaping culture and the marketplace.”
—Michiko Kakutani, The New York Times
“Persuasive. . . . Lanier is the first great apostate of the
Internet era.”
—Newsweek
“Thrilling and thought-provoking. . . . A necessary corrective in
the echo chamber of technology debates.”
—San Francisco Chronicle
“Mind-bending, exuberant, brilliant. . . . Lanier dares to say the
forbidden.”
—The Washington Post
“With an expertise earned through decades of work in the field,
Lanier challenges us to express our essential humanity via 21st
century technology instead of disappearing in it. . . . [You Are
Not a Gadget] compels readers to take a fresh look at the power—and
limitations—of human interaction in a socially networked
world.”
—Time (“The 2010 Time 100”)
“Lanier is not of my generation, but he knows and understands us
well, and has written a short and frightening book, You Are Not a
Gadget, which chimes with my own discomfort, while coming from a
position of real knowledge and insight, both practical and
philosophical.”
—Zadie Smith, The New York Review of Books
“Sparky, thought-provoking. . . . Lanier clearly enjoys rethinking
received tech wisdom: his book is a refreshing change from Silicon
Valley’s usual hype.”
—New Scientist
“Important. . . . At the bottom of Lanier’s cyber-tinkering is a
fundamentally humanist faith in technology. . . . His mind is a
fascinating place to hang out.”
—Los Angeles Times
“A call for a more humanistic—to say nothing of humane—alternative
future in which the individual is celebrated more than the crowd
and the unique more than the homogenized. . . . You Are Not a
Gadget may be its own best argument for exalting the creativity of
the individual over the collective efforts of the ‘hive mind.’ It’s
the work of a singular visionary.”
—Bloomberg News
“A bracing dose of economic realism and Randian philosophy for all
those techno utopianists with their heads in the cloud. . . .
[Lanier is] a true iconoclast. . . . He offers the sort of
originality of thought he finds missing on the Web.”
—The Miami Herald
“For those who wish to read to think, and read to transform, You
Are Not a Gadget is a book to begin the 2010s. . . . It is raw,
raucous and unexpected. It is also a hell of a lot of fun.”
—Times Higher Education
“[Lanier] confronts the big issues with bracing directness. . . .
The reader sits up. One of the insider’s insiders of the computing
world seems to have gone rogue.”
—The Boston Globe
“Gadget is an essential first step at harnessing a post-Google
world.”
—The Stranger (Seattle)
“Lanier turns a philosopher’s eye to our everyday online tools. . .
. The reader is compelled to engage with his work, to assent,
contradict, and contemplate. . . . Lovers of the Internet and all
its possibilities owe it to themselves to plunge into Lanier’s
manifesto and look hard in the mirror. He’s not telling us what to
think; he’s challenging us to take a hard look at our cyberculture,
and emerge with new creative inspiration.”
—Flavorwire
“Poetic and prophetic, this could be the most important book of the
year. . . . Read this book and rise up against net
regimentation!”
—The Times (London)
“[Lanier’s] argument will make intuitive sense to anyone concerned
with questions of propriety, responsibility, and authenticity.”
—The New Yorker
“Inspired, infuriating and utterly necessary. . . . Lanier tells of
the loss of a hi-tech Eden, of the fall from play into labour,
obedience and faith. Welcome to the century’s first great plea for
a ‘new digital humanism’ against the networked conformity of
cyber-space. This eloquent, eccentric riposte comes from a sage of
the virtual world who assures us that, in spite of its crimes and
follies, ‘I love the internet.’ That provenance will only deepen
its impact, and broaden its appeal.”
—The Independent (London)
“Fascinating and provocative. . . . Destined to become a must-read
for both critics and advocates of online-based technology and
culture.”
—Publishers Weekly
Popularly known for his ruminations on the social pathology of information technology, computer scientist Lanier is immensely concerned that the design patterns of today's omnipresent 2.0 web services are about to be locked in. He argues that technology prophets from many disciplines have us blissfully ignorant of the sacrifices we make when submerging our individual identities into online collectives like Facebook. In addition, the web's early promise in terms of innovation, democracy, and interpersonal communication has not come to be; instead, an online culture has emerged that undermines the foundation of the knowledge economy. Flows of information, Lanier notes, are more important than what is being shared, whole expressions of creativity and arguments are replaced by fragments, and authors are successful by simply reusing the past instead of producing genuinely new works. Still, Lanier is optimistic that it's not too late to move away from cybernetic totalism by taking the "red pill" his book offers-for the web does not design itself, we design it. Verdict If you can't imagine a world without today's social technologies, this is a must read for 2010. [100,000-copy first printing; see Prepub Alert, LJ 9/1/09.]-James A. Buczynski, Seneca Coll. of Applied Arts & Technology, Toronto Copyright 2009 Reed Business Information.
A New York Times, Los Angeles Times, and Boston Globe
Bestseller
"Lucid, powerful and persuasive. . . . Necessary reading for anyone
interested in how the Web and the software we use every day are
reshaping culture and the marketplace."
-Michiko Kakutani, The New York Times
"Persuasive. . . . Lanier is the first great apostate of the
Internet era."
-Newsweek
"Thrilling and thought-provoking. . . . A necessary corrective in
the echo chamber of technology debates."
-San Francisco Chronicle
"Mind-bending, exuberant, brilliant. . . . Lanier dares to say the
forbidden."
-The Washington Post
"With an expertise earned through decades of work in the field,
Lanier challenges us to express our essential humanity via 21st
century technology instead of disappearing in it. . . . [You Are
Not a Gadget] compels readers to take a fresh look at the
power-and limitations-of human interaction in a socially networked
world."
-Time ("The 2010 Time 100")
"Lanier is not of my generation, but he knows and understands us
well, and has written a short and frightening book, You Are Not
a Gadget, which chimes with my own discomfort, while coming
from a position of real knowledge and insight, both practical and
philosophical."
-Zadie Smith, The New York Review of Books
"Sparky, thought-provoking. . . . Lanier clearly enjoys rethinking
received tech wisdom: his book is a refreshing change from Silicon
Valley's usual hype."
-New Scientist
"Important. . . . At the bottom of Lanier's cyber-tinkering is a
fundamentally humanist faith in technology. . . . His mind is a
fascinating place to hang out."
-Los Angeles Times
"A call for a more humanistic-to say nothing of humane-alternative
future in which the individual is celebrated more than the crowd
and the unique more than the homogenized. . . . You Are Not a
Gadget may be its own best argument for exalting the creativity
of the individual over the collective efforts of the 'hive mind.'
It's the work of a singular visionary."
-Bloomberg News
"A bracing dose of economic realism and Randian philosophy for all
those techno utopianists with their heads in the cloud. . . .
[Lanier is] a true iconoclast. . . . He offers the sort of
originality of thought he finds missing on the Web."
-The Miami Herald
"For those who wish to read to think, and read to transform, You
Are Not a Gadget is a book to begin the 2010s. . . . It is raw,
raucous and unexpected. It is also a hell of a lot of fun."
-Times Higher Education
"[Lanier] confronts the big issues with bracing directness. . . .
The reader sits up. One of the insider's insiders of the computing
world seems to have gone rogue."
-The Boston Globe
"Gadget is an essential first step at harnessing a
post-Google world."
-The Stranger (Seattle)
"Lanier turns a philosopher's eye to our everyday online tools. . .
. The reader is compelled to engage with his work, to assent,
contradict, and contemplate. . . . Lovers of the Internet and all
its possibilities owe it to themselves to plunge into Lanier's
manifesto and look hard in the mirror. He's not telling us what to
think; he's challenging us to take a hard look at our cyberculture,
and emerge with new creative inspiration."
-Flavorwire
"Poetic and prophetic, this could be the most important book of the
year. . . . Read this book and rise up against net
regimentation!"
-The Times (London)
"[Lanier's] argument will make intuitive sense to anyone concerned
with questions of propriety, responsibility, and authenticity."
-The New Yorker
"Inspired, infuriating and utterly necessary. . . . Lanier tells of
the loss of a hi-tech Eden, of the fall from play into labour,
obedience and faith. Welcome to the century's first great plea for
a 'new digital humanism' against the networked conformity of
cyber-space. This eloquent, eccentric riposte comes from a sage of
the virtual world who assures us that, in spite of its crimes and
follies, 'I love the internet.' That provenance will only deepen
its impact, and broaden its appeal."
-The Independent (London)
"Fascinating and provocative. . . . Destined to become a must-read
for both critics and advocates of online-based technology and
culture."
-Publishers Weekly
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