Tag Archive: 1984


Big Other is watching us

THE AGE OF SURVEILLANCE CAPITALISM by Shoshana Zuboff (Profile Books 2019)

‘The fight for a human future at the new frontier of power’ – that is the dramatic subtitle of this important study which warns that our very humanity is at stake as a result of fast-moving changes in technology over the last two decades.

Shoshana Zuboff is the Charles Edward Wilson Professor Emerita at Harvard Business School so one would expect that she is not one to exaggerate without good cause.  As you read her brilliant and powerfully argued book, you realise she has good reason to express the negative view that surveillance capitalism is “a form of tyranny that feeds on people but is not of the people”.

Some of the invasion of privacy and manipulative actions she documents are probably known to most readers but it is the sheer scope and range of the influence that is so terrifying. The lawless and anti-democratic escalation of surveillance capitalist corporations leads to the chilling realisation that it may already be too late to halt or restrict their influence.

Without any controls or restrictions these bodies can pretty well do as the please and they have taken full advantage of this to infiltrate every aspect of our lives. Practically everyone on the planet is now traceable and trackable. We are all connected whether we like it or not.  Opting out is no longer an option. Continue reading

NEUROMANCER by William Gibson (1984)

neuromancerI have a difficult relationship with this novel.

I know that it is one of the most groundbreaking and significant SF works ever written but each time I pick  it up I always get lost in the dense prose and what hits me as an overwhelming rush of jargon.

As most will know, this was where the word ‘cyberspace’ was first popularized and for that alone Gibson is assured of immortality, at least until the wires of that feed the human race are permanently unplugged.

He brilliantly describes the then fledgling internet as a “consensual hallucination” and the lead character Case is paid to hack into “the infinite neuroelectric void of the matrix”. Continue reading