The Dark Side of Our Digital World

And What You Can Do about It

By (author) Andrew Weiss

Hardback - £30.00

Publication date:

18 May 2020

Length of book:

282 pages

Publisher

Rowman & Littlefield Publishers

ISBN-13: 9781538119051

An all-in-one guide to understanding and managing the dark side of our digital lives.

It all started out so well: the online world began as an effective tool for communication that carried with it a great promise to level the playing field and eliminate borders. But it’s morphed into something totally unintended. We’ve all had to endure the troll that derails a generally benign conversation; or received that scam email from a wealthy Nigerian prince; or felt the strange feeling of being watched and tracked by advertising companies as we navigate the web. Welcome to the modern internet.

These are but a few of the topics that The Dark Side of Our Digital World: And What You Can Do about It examines to get at the root causes of our current problems with information technology, social media, and problematic online behavior. The book explores the issues raised by the negative side of information technology, including surveillance and spying, declining privacy, information overload, surveillance capitalism and big data analytics, conspiracy theories and fake news, misinformation and disinformation, trolling and phishing.

What’s ultimately at stake is how we are able to cope with increasingly invasive anti-social behaviors, the overall decline of privacy in the face of total surveillance technologies, and the lack of a quality online experience that doesn’t devolve into flame wars and insults. The future of the internet as well as our societies depends upon our ability to discern truth from lies and reality from propaganda. The book will therefore also examine the possible directions we could take to improve the situation, looking at solutions in the areas of psychology and behavioral conditioning, social engineering through nudging techniques, the development of e-democracy movements, and the implementation of public policy.

RECOMMENDED. . . [Weiss] explores the many ills that accompany modern internet-mediated society, from data loss to trolling to surveillance capitalism. Weiss presents these as what he calls "information pathologies," and in discussing them he compares the visible and underlying issues in information to the symptoms and root causes of a disease. . . . Weiss's overview of all these problems would be useful for readers looking for an entry point into this community of thought.