A Financial Times ‘Best Thing I Read This Year’
LONGLISTED FOR THE FT & MCKINSEY BUSINESS BOOK OF THE YEAR AWARD
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 now live.
It is the story of a massive reallocation of revenue in which $50 billion a year has moved from the creators and owners of content to the monopoly platforms. With this reallocation of money comes a shift in power. Google, Facebook and Amazon now enjoy political power on par with Big Oil and Big Pharma, which in part explains how such a tremendous shift in revenues from creators to platforms could have been achieved and why it has gone unchallenged for so long.
And if you think that’s got nothing to do with you, their next move is to come after your jobs.
Move Fast and Break Things is a call to arms, to say that is enough is enough and to demand that we do everything in our power to create a different future.
Related Listens
- The Fourth Industrial Revolution – Klaus Schwab (Abridged)
- The Filter Bubble : What The Internet Is Hiding From You – Eli Pariser (Abridged)
- New Power : Why outsiders are winning, institutions are failing, and how the rest of us can keep up in the age of mass participation – Jeremy Heimans, Henry Timms (Abridged)
- Alone Together : Why We Expect More from Technology and Less from Each Other (Third Edition) – Sherry Turkle (Abridged)
- What To Do When Machines Do Everything : How to Get Ahead in a World of AI, Algorithms, Bots, and Big Data – Malcolm Frank, Paul Roehrig, Ben Pring (Abridged)
- We Are the Nerds : The Birth and Tumultuous Life of REDDIT, the Internet’s Culture Laboratory – Christine Lagorio-Chafkin (Abridged)
- Tyranny of E-mail : The Four-Thousand-Year Journey to Your Inbox – John Freeman (Abridged)
- This Is Why We Can’t Have Nice Things : Mapping the Relationship between Online Trolling and Mainstream Culture – Whitney Phillips (Abridged)