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Too Smart - How Digital Capitalism is Extracting Data, Controlling Our Lives, and Taking Over the World (Paperback)
Price: R328
Discovery Miles 3 280
You Save: R87
(21%)
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Too Smart - How Digital Capitalism is Extracting Data, Controlling Our Lives, and Taking Over the World (Paperback)
Series: The MIT Press
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List price R415
Price R328
Discovery Miles 3 280
You Save R87 (21%)
Expected to ship within 5 - 7 working days
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Who benefits from smart technology? Whose interests are served when
we trade our personal data for convenience and connectivity? Smart
technology is everywhere: smart umbrellas that light up when rain
is in the forecast; smart cars that relieve drivers of the drudgery
of driving; smart toothbrushes that send your dental hygiene
details to the cloud. Nothing is safe from smartification. In Too
Smart, Jathan Sadowski looks at the proliferation of smart stuff in
our lives and asks whether the tradeoff-exchanging our personal
data for convenience and connectivity-is worth it. Who benefits
from smart technology? Sadowski explains how data, once the purview
of researchers and policy wonks, has become a form of capital.
Smart technology, he argues, is driven by the dual imperatives of
digital capitalism: extracting data from, and expanding control
over, everything and everybody. He looks at three domains colonized
by smart technologies' collection and control systems: the smart
self, the smart home, and the smart city. The smart self involves
more than self-tracking of steps walked and calories burned; it
raises questions about what others do with our data and how they
direct our behavior-whether or not we want them to. The smart home
collects data about our habits that offer business a window into
our domestic spaces. And the smart city, where these systems have
space to grow, offers military-grade surveillance capabilities to
local authorities. Technology gets smart from our data. We may
enjoy the conveniences we get in return (the refrigerator says
we're out of milk!), but, Sadowski argues, smart technology
advances the interests of corporate technocratic power-and will
continue to do so unless we demand oversight and ownership of our
data.
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