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The Tech Coup

How to Save Democracy from Silicon Valley

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The Tech Coup

By: Marietje Schaake
Narrated by: Lorna Bennett
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About this listen

Under the cover of "innovation," technology companies have successfully resisted regulation and have even begun to seize power from governments themselves. Facial recognition firms track citizens for police surveillance. Cryptocurrency has wiped out the savings of millions and threatens the stability of the global financial system. Spyware companies sell intelligence tools to anyone who can afford them. This new reality—where unregulated technology has become a forceful instrument for autocrats worldwide—is terrible news for democracies and citizens.

In The Tech Coup, Marietje Schaake explains how technology companies crept into nearly every corner of our lives and our governments. She takes us beyond the headlines to high-stakes meetings with human rights defenders, business leaders, computer scientists, and politicians to show how technologies have gone from being heralded as utopian to undermining the pillars of our democracies. To reverse this existential power imbalance, Schaake outlines solutions to empower elected officials and citizens alike. Democratic leaders can-and must-resist the influence of corporate lobbying and reinvent themselves as dynamic, flexible guardians of our digital world. Schaake offers a frightening look at our modern tech-obsessed world—and a clear-eyed view of how democracies can build a better future before it is too late.

©2024 Marietje Schaake (P)2024 Kalorama
Machine Theory & Artificial Intelligence Politics & Government Surveillance
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  • Overall
    3 out of 5 stars
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    3 out of 5 stars

Couldn’t listen beyond the first few chapters

The book promises much. Delivers little, at least in the first few chapters. What makes this audible unlistenable is the narrator. The constant stress on syllables that don’t exist in the OED. Chinnahh! Datahhh! Americahh! Remindahh! It becomes distracting from the content and wishing somebody had bothered to tell the naratohhh, the enunciation of all words with an added ahhh - leaves me wondering D’ohhhhh! Nope. Unbearable listening!

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  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars

Riveting journey across the tensions between tech kings and democracy advocates

It’s a sharp critique of the last decades’ push for the freedom to extract and consolidate power with technology.

I like that it relates with the people involved, even while revealing how their actions undermine democracy.

(The narration by Lorna Bennett has real character, which I like. My only tiny gripe is that she occasionally sounds pleasantly exuberant when mentioning the name of something that seems kinda bad, like “section 230”).

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