Review by New York Times Review
the dystopia George Orwell conjured up in "1984" wasn't a prediction. It was, instead, a reflection. Newspeak, the Ministry of Truth, the Inner Party, the Outer Party - that novel sampled and remixed a reality that Nazi and Soviet totalitarianism had already made apparent. Scary stuff, certainly, but maybe the more frightening dystopia is the one no one warned you about, the one you wake up one morning to realize you're living inside. Roger McNamee, an esteemed venture capitalist, would appear to agree. "A dystopian technology future overran our lives before we were ready," he writes in "Zucked." Think that sounds like overstatement? Let's examine the evidence. At its peak the planet's fourth most valuable company, and arguably its most influential, is controlled almost entirely by a young man with the charisma of a geometry T.A. The totality of this man's professional life has been running this company, which calls itself "a platform." Company, platform - whatever it is, it provides a curious service wherein billions of people fill it with content: baby photos, birthday wishes, concert promotions, psychotic premonitions of Jewish lizard-men. No one is paid by the company for this labor; on the contrary, users are rewarded by being tracked across the web, even when logged out, and consequently strip-mined by a complicated artificial intelligence trained to sort surveilled information into approximately 29,000 predictive data points, which are then made available to advertisers and other third parties, who now know everything that can be known about a person without trepanning her skull. Amazingly, none of this is secret, despite the company's best efforts to keep it so. Somehow, people still use and love this platform. Hostile foreign intelligence services also love this platform, if only because its users have proved shockingly vulnerable to social manipulation - a dark art the company itself has admitted to dabbling in. In 2014, the company set out to learn whether it could make its users sad and angry on purpose. It learned it could. When this astonishing breach of user trust became public, the company claimed it wasn't a big deal, that many companies did similar things. It was, and they don't. A tech company founded on creating human connection is now ripping American society apart and compromising our civic foundation, though not because it has overtly wicked intent. As McNamee elucidates, our "democracy has been undermined because of design choices." Choices including the platform's pleasurable, frictionless interface, which encourages users to stay and return. It's no stretch to posit that because human neurotransmitters respond to the platform's iconic use of a certain shade of blue, and spark with dopamine upon receiving a "like" or "tag" notification, desperate children are now living in cages and a raving madman occupies the Oval Office. Not even Orwell, after a feast of psilocybin, could have predicted this dystopia. This one's all ours. For any aliens or recently arrived time travelers reading this, the company in question is Facebook, and its young leader Mark Zuckerberg, with whom McNamee has such a long and familiar relationship so as to refer to him throughout by his diminutive, Zuck. In 2006, McNamee writes, he counseled the 22-year-old C.E.O. against selling Facebook to Yahoo for a billion dollars. "I don't want to disappoint everyone," Zuckerberg said. McNamee urged him to look beyond that and "keep Facebook independent." Zuck heeded McNamee's advice, and here we are. McNamee also profited from this mentorship. Along with his venture capital firm, Elevation Partners, the author made a fortune off an early investment in Zuckerberg's company, a subject about which he is now suitably circumspect, given his belief that Facebook, along with Google and other tech giants, today represents "the greatest threat to the global order in my lifetime." A selfidentified "capitalist," McNamee currently advocates breaking up Facebook's data monopoly by force, and heavily regulating its appalling business practices. "Zucked" is thus a candid and highly entertaining explanation of how and why a man who spent decades picking tech winners and cheering his industry on has been carried to the shore of social activism. McNAMEE SAVES HIS MOST COnspICUOUS outrage for Facebook's amoral leadership at the hands of not just Zuckerberg but also his chief operating officer, Sheryl Sandberg, whom McNamee recommended Zuck hire before she could take a job at The Washington Post. McNamee describes their grip on the company as "the most centralized decision-making structure I have ever encountered in a large company." Their power dyad is possible only because Facebook's "core platform," as McNamee puts it, is relatively simple: It "consists of a product and a monetization scheme." Non-tech companies with comparable global reach (Coca-Cola, Exxon) must deal with complex real-world infrastructure issues as well as the needs of a highly diverse work force. Large corporations also typically create interrelated eddies of economic activity, whereas Facebook's business model is founded upon sucking the economic activity out of otherwise productive workers. Most troubling of all, a company whose product is used by one-third of the planet has only 30,000 employees. In every imaginable sense, Facebook is a Borg-like drain on the world's economy. It doesn't make you better and likely makes you worse. Unlike Exxon, it can't even get you to Albuquerque. The story of Facebook has been told many times before, but McNamee does a superb job of contextualizing its rise within the proper technological history. Without the advents of the iPhone, cloud data storage and the industry's "lean start-up" model, Facebook may well have wandered down the bleak path of the short-lived early-2000s social media entities Myspace and Friendster. McNamee also takes care to remind the reader of the telltale heart (or lack thereof) beating beneath the floorboards of Facebook headquarters: Its first iteration, Facemash, invited Harvard students to compare photos of female classmates - photos Zuckerberg stole from online student housing directories - for the high cause of determining who was hotter. Yes, the world's fourth most valuable company can trace its origins to the frustrated misogyny of an ur-incel. The moral vacuousness Zuckerberg displayed as a young adult should have told us something about how he and many other young "disrupters" intended to operate. As McNamee writes, "You can imagine how attractive a philosophy that absolves practitioners of responsibility for the impact of their actions on others would be to entrepreneurs and investors in Silicon Valley." The most stirring parts of the book are those in which McNamee makes the angry but measured argument that "social media has enabled personal views that had previously been kept in check by social pressure." The kook we will always have with us, to paraphrase Jesus, but the kooks of yore had to work to maintain their kookery and locate fellow kooks. They had to pick up their kook phone, subscribe to the kook newsletter, drive to the kook convention. Nowadays, all the kook has to do is log in to Facebook, where his feed will be enlivened by the chatter of fellow - and likely more extreme - kooks, toward which Facebook's algorithms helpfully steer him. Zuckerberg et al. probably didn't set out to transform American neoNazism into this generation's punk rock, but the platforms they created have generated "a feedback loop that reinforces and amplifies ideas with a speed and at a scale that are unprecedented." McNamee's book is not merely the cri de coeur of a forsworn tech optimist zinged by moral conscience. It's also a robust and helpful itemization of the ways Facebook could be brought to heel. McNamee clearly believes the company can be made into something more benign, and perhaps even socially beneficial. That may or may not be true, but the damage it has already done is not precisely containable. Considering the high likelihood that Russian activity on Facebook may have tipped the 2016 election to Donald Trump, the damage is already of generational measure. But here's the bizarre quirk of the Facebook dystopia, whose sheer perversity would have likely pleased Orwell: It's all Big and no Brother. Our time and lives are the company's only currency. Without our continued attention, Facebook quite literally has nothing, and its empire could be brought down with a feather. Now, blow. TOM BISSELL is the author, most recently, of "Apostle."
Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [June 30, 2019]
Review by Booklist Review
With roughly 2.3-billion active monthly users, Facebook easily eclipses Instagram and Twitter as the world's most popular social media platform. As a veteran technology consultant who mentored Facebook founder Mark Zuck Zuckerberg during the company's formative years, McNamee reveals a darker truth lurking in those swelling numbers by highlighting the many crafty ways advertisers and political organizations have used the website to influence public opinion. After recounting his early career in Silicon Valley and providing an inside view of internet company founders and their libertarian philosophy of guilt-free ambition, McNamee traces Facebook's shift from a benign public service to an instrument of powerful outside forces. The bulk of this evidence is exposed in the author's descriptions of the many disturbing fake news and misogynist anti-Hillary posts that appeared to be from Sanders supporters during the 2016 election campaign, which the Mueller investigation has since attributed primarily to Russian intelligence interference. McNamee's work is both a first-rate history of social media and a cautionary manifesto protesting their often overlooked and still growing dangers to human society.--Carl Hays Copyright 2019 Booklist
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
McNamee (The New Normal), founder of the venture capital firm Elevation Partners, provides an informative guide, bolstered by a unique insider's perspective, to scandals involving Facebook, particularly those involving the 2016 presidential election. He describes going from being an early booster of and investor in the site, as well as Mark Zuckerberg's advisor-he counseled the Facebook founder in 2006 against selling to a larger company-to conducting his own investigation into Russian intelligence's use of Facebook and urging American politicians to have Zuckerberg testify on Capitol Hill. He also discusses how Facebook deepens political divides, how tech giants use consumers' data against them, and how conspiracy theories proliferate online. He makes the case for more stringent regulation of powerful internet companies and for a philosophical shift in Silicon Valley away from impersonal metrics and toward "human-driven technology, an approach not predicated on exploiting the vulnerabilities of human psychology." The book is a little overlong due to some redundant and all-too-familiar passages on the dangers of social media, as well as some seemingly irrelevant autobiography. However, it succeeds as a comprehensible primer on the political pitfalls of big tech. Agent: Andrew Wylie, Wylie Agency. (Feb.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
Review by Kirkus Book Review
Venture capitalist and technology consultant McNamee (The New Normal: Great Opportunities in a Time of Great Risk, 2014, etc.) turns a hard eye on Facebook, a company in which he invested early.Not long before the 2016 election, writes the author, he got the sense that something wasn't quite right with Facebook's general run of posts. He saw "a surgeof disturbing images, shared by friends, that originated on Facebook Groups ostensibly associated with the Bernie Sanders campaign," all of them containing "deeply misogynistic depictions of Hillary Clinton." This flew in the face of Sanders' conduct, as did Facebook's allowing a slew of "inorganic" propaganda promoting such things as Brexit. All of this led McNamee to the conclusion that social media is a more effective tool for spreading messages of discord, hatred, and fear than harmonyor, as he writes, "Facebook has managed to connect 2.2 billion people and drive them apart at the same time." His warnings to Facebook's executives, including the fellow he calls Zuck, have gone largely ignored, while Facebook has promoted algorithms favoring big-money advertisers that rely on exploiting the private data of its users. Even given this, and even given Facebook's "monopoly power," few users seem quick to shed the service or to acknowledge their addiction to it. More, such internet platforms "pollute the public square by empowering negative voices at the expense of positive ones," turning the free-speech mandate of the internet's pioneers into a forum for bullying and bullhorns. Against all this, McNamee prescribes a diet that includes not buying into the vitriol as well as erasing one's Facebook history and not using Google because of its exploitative data-collection policies, instead using neutral search engines that do not collect dataas well as limiting one's social media time to a few minutes a day, recognizing that these platforms are fine examples of the law of diminishing returns.A well-reasoned and well-argued case against extractive technology. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.