"Delta Search" (Quest for Tomorrow 1) by William Shatner, the title may be search for, but the plot indicates search by. Delta, the ruling Earth dictator, sends bright red-lipsticked assassin Steele with team to kill Kate, Carl, and baby Jim, but only his wife is slain. The first pages are all Kate, and foreboding. To me, she stays the hero (Spoiler: despite dying lines later. Her son carries her coded secret, directed by girl Cat, who is propelled in turn by her uncle and his chip-stored secrets she transports.) To me heroes act to change their fate, are not passive receptacles or dandelion fluff in the breeze.
I kept reading because the puzzle keeps assembling. The plot does have clever twists, especially the end. But I do not agree with secrets; they cause trouble in real life and fiction. Here, techno-babble functions like sorcerous spells; the story feels superficial, sad, a Greek tragedy where doom is unavoidable because of heroic flaw. Perhaps the author's attempt to show the sides' characters switch and accept their opposite viewpoints deserves stars. I feel confused, diffused, off-track.
Carl marries Tabitha, hides the family away in a far-off planet colony. He keeps them safe, never discloses their danger. On his sixteenth birthday, Jim disobeys, applies to be a starship captain, sends their genetic data to government, to Delta, and the sky truly falls. The heavens rain hell.
Spoilers:
Jim kills Carl, and is poisoned, like a Trojan Horse, to infect Delta and his computers. Technology to power everything, hurt and heal on the spot with nanotech and genetic manipulation, messages encoded in DNA - all feels like magic in scientific jargon with guilt, remorse, regret, thrown in for human touch. Good guys don't want to kill is the old Star Trek mantra (for Captain Jim Kirk aka Shatner), but they do. Token figure of romance, brave Pleb girl Cat, feels sorry for naive Jim, leads him to her bed, so he falls in love. Like 1960-70s, females are mother, Mary, or Magdalene.
All the pain of the present stems from the past. Delta and Kate's research invented the system whereby men (with head hole jacks) anywhere in the stars can plug into the computer net. Kate warns that an increasing number of Plebs unemployed by mechanization will suffer mass Psychosis, random fatal violent behavior. When Delta disregards her advice and kills her, billions die and civilization suffers major setback. When people put me off and away, my little world suffers. I identify with Kate. If the moral of the story is Avoid head hole jacks to the internet, I agree.