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Jill Lepore: If Then (2020, Liveright)

The Simulmatics Corporation, launched during the Cold War, mined data, targeted voters, manipulated consumers, destabilized …

Lots of potential but less than the sum of its parts

I am a total sucker for learning anything and everything I can about the mid 20th century think tanks and defense contractors that helped invent American technocracy. And yet I find myself lukewarm on this book at best.

The weakest part of the book is its core thesis: it attempts to make Simulmatics, a short-lived company that was far more bark than bite, into a harbinger of the modern data-driven, democracy-destroying privacy nightmare we live in today. The author fails to do this. Oh, she makes the claim that it is a harbinger, many times, but she doesn't show the work, seemingly expecting the reader to go "oh, that sounds similar enough that it must be the same thing."

Simulmatics was a shambles of a company run by a bright-burning PR hack and staffed by scientists who did not seem to be very good at their jobs. They never owned …

@darius yeah, I think if the book hadn't tried to do the harbinger argument it would have been more compelling. I mean, part of what was missing from her attempt to mirror Simulmatics and Cambridge Analytica was an acknowledgment that...even by the time this book came out people had kind of forgotten about Cambridge Analytica. I might assign the essay Lepore did basically summarizing the book in The New Yorker in future undergrad classes because I've found that a lot of the time students think that the dilemmas they're grappling with are brand new and unprecedented and it's a good reality check for them, but the "Simulmatics brought us this future" framing feels more like a thing said to sell books than a coherent argument.