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In an era of corporate surveillance, artificial intelligence, deep
fakes, genetic modification, automation, and more, law often seems
to take a back seat to rampant technological change. To listen to
Silicon Valley barons, there's nothing any of us can do about it.
In this riveting work, Joshua A. T. Fairfield calls their bluff. He
provides a fresh look at law, at what it actually is, how it works,
and how we can create the kind of laws that help humans thrive in
the face of technological change. He shows that law can keep up
with technology because law is a kind of technology - a social
technology built by humans out of cooperative fictions like firms,
nations, and money. However, to secure the benefits of changing
technology for all of us, we need a new kind of law, one that
reflects our evolving understanding of how humans use language to
cooperate.
In an era of corporate surveillance, artificial intelligence, deep
fakes, genetic modification, automation, and more, law often seems
to take a back seat to rampant technological change. To listen to
Silicon Valley barons, there's nothing any of us can do about it.
In this riveting work, Joshua A. T. Fairfield calls their bluff. He
provides a fresh look at law, at what it actually is, how it works,
and how we can create the kind of laws that help humans thrive in
the face of technological change. He shows that law can keep up
with technology because law is a kind of technology - a social
technology built by humans out of cooperative fictions like firms,
nations, and money. However, to secure the benefits of changing
technology for all of us, we need a new kind of law, one that
reflects our evolving understanding of how humans use language to
cooperate.
In this compelling examination of the intersection of smart
technology and the law, Joshua A. T. Fairfield explains the crisis
of digital ownership - how and why we no longer control our
smartphones or software-enable devices, which are effectively owned
by software and content companies. In two years we will not own our
'smart' televisions which will also be used by advertisers to
listen in to our living rooms. In the coming decade, if we do not
take back our ownership rights, the same will be said of our
self-driving cars and software-enabled homes. We risk becoming
digital peasants, owned by software and advertising companies, not
to mention overreaching governments. Owned should be read by anyone
wanting to know more about the loss of our property rights, the
implications for our privacy rights and how we can regain control
of both.
In this compelling examination of the intersection of smart
technology and the law, Joshua A. T. Fairfield explains the crisis
of digital ownership - how and why we no longer control our
smartphones or software-enable devices, which are effectively owned
by software and content companies. In two years we will not own our
'smart' televisions which will also be used by advertisers to
listen in to our living rooms. In the coming decade, if we do not
take back our ownership rights, the same will be said of our
self-driving cars and software-enabled homes. We risk becoming
digital peasants, owned by software and advertising companies, not
to mention overreaching governments. Owned should be read by anyone
wanting to know more about the loss of our property rights, the
implications for our privacy rights and how we can regain control
of both.
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