Trust the oceans will subside. Trust the migrants will adapt. Trust your ex-brain will serve you.
In the 2050s, our predicted future is reality. The climate has changed. People flee the coasts and the heat zones to survive, and refugees reshape the world. And yet, through technology we adapt. Some of us even thrive. Our external brains, or ex-brains, show us how to solve our problems, help us predict and overcome. We trust, and we move forward. Joe Watson, a pioneering lawyer, and his wife Evie, a predictive psychologist, helped build this new world. When it turns against them, can they reclaim their future?
A riveting, well-crafted thriller in a not-so-distant future where AIs, otherwise known as ex-brains, augment everything that society does and plans to do. They dictate city building needs, climate change is biting hard and tens of millions are relocating inland, create budgets, recruit workers and forecast the future in statistical terms.
Against this backdrop Joe and Evie live as successful professionals who embrace the technology, Joe as a lawyer and Evie as a health worker. But are the ex-brains as objective and impartial as they are supposed to be, and are Joe and Evie (and everyone else for that matter) controlling the ex-brains, or have the ex-brains thrown off the shackles imposed by arbitrary human laws?
Just when you think you've figured it all out, the author throws in a twist that'll leave you with that "I should have seen that coming" feeling. Very enjoyable.
I don't read much in the way of near-future dystopian AI SciFi, but I'm really glad I selected this book on a recent ebook promo week. It's well crafted with excellent character portrayal, plot development and just enough uncertainty to keep you turning the pages.
I love it that at end of each chapter is a little Q&A from a future entity called the Ex-Brain Foundation which neatly summarizes core concepts of the pervasive AIs called ex-brains which future societies use to model, predict, intervene and plan almost everything from litigating law suits to building cities.
God knows that this could very well be one possible iteration of our future if we let our guard down.
fabulous forward thinking and Future Shock reminder
This is the third fabulous novel about the possible implications of AI for our future. By speculating about possible scenarios in fiction, writers have always helped our societies both prepare and predict. Every adult should be reading all they can about how AI is changing our now, and how they might change our future. This novel asks the vital question of how humans can control that future rather than be controlled. The terminator may not come with a gun and an adaptive body, it may come as a coffee maker and audiovisual equipment.
Although predictable in many ways, it kept the reader involved but with a twist at the end. As a view of how AI might evolve, it was convincing and scary. A bit off reality with a future that still used feet and inches, only the US can be that out of touch today.
I seldom read fiction, but, I really enjoyed this book. The author's choice to explore the state of AI technology present and future through a gripping 'who-done-it' is brilliant. As I read the story of the Ex-Brain's development and evolution, I couldn't help but continually parallel the author's descriptions with the recent headlines on the technology and ethics of the current, and potential future state of AI systems. No better way to learn about the complex and nuanced field of AI development than with an exciting crime story.
I'm definitely looking forward to Part 2, or the inevitable movie.
This is a fantastic book. It does an expert job of blending the following:
1. Highlighting some of the potential benefits and risk of a future where AI becomes a significant part of our lives 2. Story of a married couple trying to handle the typical stresses that life throws their way. 3. A thrilling story where there are lots of twists and turns.
It's the rare book that makes you think and entertains at the same time. Highly recommend.