Data Empire
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The next chapter of human history should not be written by
algorithms, it should be written by us. It is only by fully
understanding how data has shaped our past that we can decide what
role it plays in our future.'The new history of mankind demanded by
our times... This book asks what we will do about data now that we
have no choice but to do something' Jaron Lanier, author of Ten
Arguments for Deleting Your Social Media Right Now 'Breathtaking in
its scope and enormously fulfilling in its depth, this book is
profoundly fascinating' Lewis Dartnell, author of Being HumanWe
live in an era when trading our information for access can feel
harmless or inevitable yet from targeted advertising to mass
surveillance, data shapes the course of our lives.How did it gain
the power it now holds over us?Long before writing existed, at the
dawn of civilisation in Mesopotamia, rulers pressed marks into clay
to keep track of land, people and grain. To rule, they had to keep
count. It is no accident, then, that the first written name in
human history was neither a god nor a king, but an accountant.As
ships and navigation expanded our horizons, a new age of European
empires took control of more than 80 per cent of the world s
surface, using colonial censuses, maps and ledgers to decide who
belonged, who owed, and who could be sacrificed. Today, a handful
of private brokers increasingly define what we see and what is
real.Taking readers from ancient cave markings and knotted strings
to the algorithmic state, Dartmouth professor Roopika Risam reveals
how data has always been the seed of power: a technology of control
that has shaped civilizations and upheld empires. Provocative,
humane and sweeping in scope, Data Empire challenges us to decide
whether we will allow a new set of data empires to hardwire
inequality into the next century, or fight for systems that work
for the benefit of all.This groundbreaking 11,000 year history
argues that empire was never just about weapons or ships - it was
built on collecting information on us, to rule us.Perfect for
readers of Nexus and The Age of Surveillance Capitalism.'Essential
reading for understanding the opportunities and dangers of the
technological revolution now transforming our world' Jonathan
Kennedy, author of Pathogenesis'This brilliant, readable book
offers a striking new historical perspective' Corinne Fowler,
author of Our Island Stories