Move Fast and Break Things

How Facebook, Google and Amazon Have Cornered Culture and Undermined Democracy

Paperback, 320 pages

English language

Published March 22, 2018 by Pan Macmillan.

ISBN:
9781509847709
4 stars (1 review)

Google. Amazon. Facebook. The modern world is defined by vast digital monopolies turning ever-larger profits.

Those of us who consume the content that feeds them are farmed for the purposes of being sold ever more products and advertising.

Those that create the content - the artists, writers and musicians - are finding they can no longer survive in this unforgiving economic landscape. But it didn't have to be this way. In Move Fast and Break Things, Jonathan Taplin offers a succinct and powerful history of how online life began to be shaped around the values of the entrepreneurs like Peter Thiel and Larry Page who founded these all-powerful companies.

Their unprecedented growth came at the heavy cost of tolerating piracy of books, music and film, while at the same time promoting opaque business practices and subordinating the privacy of individual users to create the surveillance marketing monoculture in which we …

6 editions

Should make you very angry

4 stars

While the contents of the book are still relevant, thee tech world moves fast, so fast that some of the contents felt woefully out of date. It's pretty much the same cast of characters that seem to pop up in lots of books and podcasts at the moment, all of whom were inspired by reading The Sovereign Individual; think Peter Thiel and Co. The book deal with how these tech start up went from small and insignificant, to become the monopolies they are today, and the practices they keep so it stays that way.

While the contents are at times enlightening, it's been five years since publication, and things have only got worse.

Subjects

  • Music and the Internet
  • Social aspects
  • Amazon.com (Firm)
  • Art and the Internet
  • Literature and the Internet
  • Internet
  • Electronic commerce
  • Facebook (Electronic resource)
  • Google (Firm)
  • Online social networks
  • Technology and civilization
  • Information society
  • Social change
  • Consumption (economics)
  • Technology, social aspects
  • Internet, social aspects
  • Facebook (electronic resource)
  • Amazon.com (firm)
  • Google