Nuova era oscura

, #13

Paperback, 298 pages

Italiano language

Published June 11, 2019 by Nero Editions.

ISBN:
978-88-8056-057-9
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4 stars (17 reviews)

Internet, la rete e le tecnologie digitali avrebbero dovuto illuminare il mondo: l'hanno invece precipitato in un pozzo oscuro in cui a proliferare sono teorie del complotto, sorveglianza di massa, crisi del pensiero e catastrofe ambientale. Ma com'è stato possibile che strumenti dal così grande potenziale ci abbiano infine condotti alla soglia di una nuova era oscura, un vero e proprio medioevo digitale dominato da disuguaglianze sempre più laceranti e scarsa comprensione del mondo che ci circonda? Dalle fake news della politica ai flash crash della finanza, dai fallimenti della scienza ai disturbanti video per bambini prodotti dagli algoritmi di YouTube, James Bridle ci guida tra gli incubi di un presente in cui il peggio deve ancora arrivare, per aiutarci a comprendere che solo sbarazzandoci dei dogmi del passato possiamo sperare in un futuro di giustizia e condivisione.

5 editions

Still in the dark

3 stars

James Bridle's writing and art about the complexity of network technologies is often so careful about saying everything succinctly and clinically that it's tempting to believe that he might be part machine. So if anything, this book has proven his humanity, if a little disappointingly.

In content, writing in 2017, Bridle is ahead of his time. His topics range from bias in image machine learning models to secrecy in corporate and government surveillance. However, the structure of the chapters often reads like a Wikipedia dive, leaping between stories and vaguely connected ideas with gleeful abandon. The result is a little chaotic and difficult to connect together. By no means a bad book, but there are better examples that deal with these topics more coherently.

Review of 'New Dark Age' on 'LibraryThing'

No rating

I can’t recall how I heard about James Bridle’s new book, but somehow I became aware of it and wrote to its publisher, Verso, and they obliged me with an advanced reader copy. I thought I might make a start on it when I had a short-haul plane trip, but by the time I got home the next day, I had very nearly finished it. It’s dense, demanding, and totally compelling, though if I only had the title to go by, I might have passed it up. I’m wary of books that have the words “future” in them, or “the end of” and have read too many dyspeptic critiques of technology that are full of sound and fury but are more incensed nostalgia for a fabled golden past than insightful critique. So if you’re like me, don’t be put off by the title, New Dark Age: Technology, Knowledge and the …

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