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The Know-It-Alls - by Noam Cohen (Paperback)
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Highlights
- From the former New York Times technology reporter, "an enlightening breakdown of how Silicon Valley billionaires have shifted the popular discourse in their favor" (Kirkus)--with a new introduction and fully updated chapters Hailed as "a valuable addition" and a "Top Tech Book" by Wired.com, The Know-It-Alls offers a prescient chronicle of the rise of Silicon Valley as a political and intellectual force.
- About the Author: Noam Cohen covered the influence of the Internet on the larger culture for the New York Times, where he wrote the "Link by Link" column, beginning in 2007.
- 288 Pages
- Political Science, Political Ideologies
Description
Book Synopsis
From the former New York Times technology reporter, "an enlightening breakdown of how Silicon Valley billionaires have shifted the popular discourse in their favor" (Kirkus)--with a new introduction and fully updated chaptersHailed as "a valuable addition" and a "Top Tech Book" by Wired.com, The Know-It-Alls offers a prescient chronicle of the rise of Silicon Valley as a political and intellectual force. Showcasing this new class of super geeks, former New York Times technology reporter Noam Cohen sketches "finely researched portraits" (Nature) of the smart guys, including Jeff Bezos, Peter Thiel, Sergey Brin, Larry Page, and Mark Zuckerberg, who fell in love with a radically individualistic, anti-government ideal--and then mainstreamed it.
Now, in this completely revised and updated edition, published one year after DOGE came to town, Cohen shows how the know-it-alls came to Washington, providing a richly documented account of how their influence has metastasized, their wealth has exploded, and their technologies have frayed America's social and political fabric. The know-it-alls claim that they support Trump because the Democrats abandoned them; Cohen reveals that Trump gave them the political opening they'd been waiting for, all along.
From the decisive influence of the pandemic, to the emergence of Elon Musk as a national political force, and the appearance of new characters and technologies, Cohen's "unabashed critique" (Library Journal) is the essential guide to the real power players on today's political scene.
Review Quotes
Praise for The Know-It-Alls:
Included in Backchannel's (WIRED.com) "Top Tech Books of 2017" An "important" book on the "pervasive influence of Silicon Valley on our economy, culture and politics."
--New York Times "A valuable addition to the growing body of literature that's trying to explain how a culture of under-socialized wunderkind CEOs drove tech's future into a ditch."
--Backchannel (WIRED.com) "An unabashed critique of the values of Silicon Valley start-ups that increasingly control our lives online."
--Library Journal "The Know-It-Alls examines highly influential figures such as the often-neglected computer pioneers John McCarthy and Frederick Terman, who helped to transform Stanford, California, and its valley into a digital powerhouse -- McCarthy as the father of artificial intelligence, Terman as a catalyst for local entrepreneurialism. These finely researched portraits are a joy."
--Nature Magazine "[Cohen] shows how the cult of personality for tech entrepreneurs developed out of a 'combination of a hacker's arrogance and an entrepreneur's greed' and . . . helps chip away at the power these men (another crucial quality) have carved out for themselves. . . . An enlightening breakdown of how Silicon Valley billionaires have shifted popular discourse in their favor."
--Kirkus Reviews "Individualism is a big part of what makes America great--until it becomes a euphemism for selfishness and arrogance among lucky winners who prefer to believe that luck and other people had nothing to do with their success. The Know-It-Alls is a terrific case study of some of the unreckoned costs of the digital revolution, and how one piece of the American idea threatens to overwhelm the others."
--Kurt Andersen, author of Fantasyland: How America Went Haywire and host of NPR's Studio 360 "Why is the Internet the way it is? How has commerce come to dominate the scramble for clicks and eyeballs? What kind of people, essentially all of them young men--brainy, ambitious, focused, very young young men--created cyberspace? Via the careers of a dozen of them, Noam Cohen tells the story in this entertaining, refreshingly unworshipful survey."
--Hendrik Hertzberg, author of Politics: Observations & Arguments and ¡Obamanos! "A fascinating intellectual profile of the people who have increasingly come to rule our world. With precision and skill, Noam Cohen tweaks the pretensions of a handful of tech oligarchs, whose self-styled project to better our lives results in little more than a power grab at our economy and our democracy. . . . I'll be turning to Cohen's insights into the profiteers responsible again and again."
--David Dayen, author of Chain of Title "A provocative and illuminating examination of Silicon Valley. Using profiles of its core digital capitalist giants and the immense political, economic and cultural power they have quickly come to possess, Cohen raises troubling questions about how this can possibly square with a fair, decent, humane, and democratic society. This immensely readable book should be mandatory reading."
--Robert W. McChesney, author of Digital Disconnect
About the Author
Noam Cohen covered the influence of the Internet on the larger culture for the New York Times, where he wrote the "Link by Link" column, beginning in 2007. He lives in Brooklyn.