Cyberselfish
High-tech and the True Revenge of the Nerds
Paulina Borsook(Author)
PublicAffairs,U.S. (Publisher)
Published on 1. June 2000
Book
Hardback
288 pages
978-1-891620-78-2 (ISBN)
Article exhausted; check for reprint
Description
A well-wired journalist/provocateur takes a sparkling, irreverent trip through the subcultures of cyberculture--and offers a rabble-rousing critique of the political myopia of the high tech world.. Paulina Borsook has been stirring up a ruckus in Silicon Valley since her days as a regular contributor to Wired magazine. She will ruffle feathers again with this spirited, funny, gimlet-eyed look at the worldview of the digerati--one she terms "violently lacking in compassion, ravingly anti-government, and tremendously opposed to regulation."In Cyberselfish Borsook journeys through and rants about high tech culture, profiling the worlds of ravers, gilders, cypherpunks, anarchocapitalists, and other Silicon Valley life forms; and exploring the theory and practice of what she dubs "technolibertarianism" in all its manifestations. Whether she is attending Bionomics conferences or hanging out with Wired staffers, reading personal ads or evaluating high-tech's sorry philanthropic record, Borsook is full of original observations, mordant wit, and furious passion that readers wake up to the social and political consequences of having computer geeks run the world.
Cyberselfish is sure to raise the hackles of high techies and to clarify what makes the rest of us so nervous about the brave new cyberworld. Paulina Borsook has been stirring up a ruckus in Silicon Valley since her days as a regular contributor to Wired magazine. She will ruffle feathers again with this spirited, funny, gimlet-eyed look at the worldview of the digerati--one she terms "violently lacking in compassion, ravingly anti-government, and tremendously opposed to regulation."In Cyberselfish Borsook journeys through and rants about high tech culture, profiling the worlds of ravers, gilders, cypherpunks, anarchocapitalists, and other Silicon Valley life forms; and exploring the theory and practice of what she dubs "technolibertarianism" in all its manifestations. Whether she is attending Bionomics conferences or hanging out with Wired staffers, reading personal ads or evaluating high-tech's sorry philanthropic record, Borsook is full of original observations, mordant wit, and furious passion that readers wake up to the social and political consequences of having computer geeks run the world.
Cyberselfish is sure to raise the hackles of high techies and to clarify what makes the rest of us so nervous about the brave new cyberworld. Borsook is one of very few women writing with an insider's savvy and feminist attitude about the internal politics of high tech Borsook is well-known among the digerati she critiques in this book and has high tech "street cred." .
Cyberselfish is sure to raise the hackles of high techies and to clarify what makes the rest of us so nervous about the brave new cyberworld. Paulina Borsook has been stirring up a ruckus in Silicon Valley since her days as a regular contributor to Wired magazine. She will ruffle feathers again with this spirited, funny, gimlet-eyed look at the worldview of the digerati--one she terms "violently lacking in compassion, ravingly anti-government, and tremendously opposed to regulation."In Cyberselfish Borsook journeys through and rants about high tech culture, profiling the worlds of ravers, gilders, cypherpunks, anarchocapitalists, and other Silicon Valley life forms; and exploring the theory and practice of what she dubs "technolibertarianism" in all its manifestations. Whether she is attending Bionomics conferences or hanging out with Wired staffers, reading personal ads or evaluating high-tech's sorry philanthropic record, Borsook is full of original observations, mordant wit, and furious passion that readers wake up to the social and political consequences of having computer geeks run the world.
Cyberselfish is sure to raise the hackles of high techies and to clarify what makes the rest of us so nervous about the brave new cyberworld. Borsook is one of very few women writing with an insider's savvy and feminist attitude about the internal politics of high tech Borsook is well-known among the digerati she critiques in this book and has high tech "street cred." .
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
United States
Dimensions
Height: 210 mm
Width: 140 mm
Weight
500 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-891620-78-2 (9781891620782)
Copyright in bibliographic data is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or its licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
New editions

Book
06/2001
PublicAffairs,U.S.
€31.13
Article is exhausted; no reprint