Yasha Levine

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Yasha Levine



Average rating: 4.18 · 1,315 ratings · 199 reviews · 9 distinct worksSimilar authors
Surveillance Valley: The Ri...

4.25 avg rating — 1,166 ratings — published 2018
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The Corruption of Malcolm G...

3.40 avg rating — 72 ratings — published 2012 — 2 editions
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A Journey Through Oligarch ...

4.59 avg rating — 22 ratings — published 2013
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Not Safe For War: The Defin...

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3.95 avg rating — 19 ratings — published 2013
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The Neocon, The Messiah, an...

3.61 avg rating — 18 ratings — published 2013
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The Koch Brothers: A Short ...

3.06 avg rating — 17 ratings — published 2013 — 2 editions
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Manhattan's Billionaire Far...

really liked it 4.00 avg rating — 3 ratings — published 2014
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The Soviet Jew: A Weaponize...

0.00 avg rating — 0 ratings
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Pistachio Wars: A Journey T...

0.00 avg rating — 0 ratings2 editions
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More books by Yasha Levine…
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“Even as it expanded into a transnational multi-billion-dollar corporation, Google managed to retain its geekily innocent “Don’t Be Evil” image. It convinced its users that everything it did was driven by a desire to help humanity. That’s the story you’ll find in just about every popular book on Google: a gee-whiz tale about two brilliant nerds from Stanford who turned a college project into an epoch-defining New Economy dynamo, a company that embodied every utopian promise of the networked society: empowerment, knowledge, democracy. For a while, it felt true. Maybe this really was the beginning of a new, highly networked world order, where the old structures—militaries, corporations, governments—were helpless before the leveling power of the Internet. As Wired’s Louis Rossetto wrote in 1995, “Everything we know will be different. Not just a change from L.B.J. to Nixon, but whether there will be a President at all.”8 Back then, anybody suggesting Google might be the herald of a new kind of dystopia, rather than a techno-utopia, would have been laughed out of the room. It was all but unthinkable.”
Yasha Levine, Surveillance Valley: The Secret Military History of the Internet

“The Internet is perhaps one of the most valuable public inventions of the twentieth century, and decisions made by a few key unelected officials in the federal bureaucracy set the Internet on the certain path to privatization. There was no real public debate, no discussion, no dissension, and no oversight. It was just given away, before anyone outside this bureaucratic bubble realized what was at stake.”
Yasha Levine, Surveillance Valley: The Secret Military History of the Internet

“Today, everything serves war. There is not one discovery which the military does not study with the aim of applying it to warfare, not one invention which they do not attempt to turn to military use. —Nikolai Fyodorov, Philosophy of the Common Cause, 1891”
Yasha Levine, Surveillance Valley: The Secret Military History of the Internet



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