Finally!! An academic text that is rigorous and readable. There is no equivocation, no academese, no needless jargon. The chapter titles alone are a perfect example of straightforward writing: "The Cloud is a Factory," "Sexism is a Feature, Not a Bug," "Your AI is a Human." These are bold, declarative titles, and this is a bold, declarative book.
To be sure, I think a lot of the arguments are overblown. I don't think we're in some apocalyptic mega-emergency here with AI and other digital tools. I think these technologies have serious problems, and these problems have been increasingly discussed (and in some cases, addressed) over the last five years. Once you point out that an algorithm is structurally biased in some way, the solution is to figure out how to eliminate that bias—whether that means having a more diverse workforce or a more diverse data training set—not pull the fire alarm and threaten to blow up the entire enterprise.
That said, I think the historical and sociological work that went into this book is top-notch. If you want to understand the hoopla around tech, AI, privacy, and the internet at large, you should start here. All of the other books are either too long, too polemical, or too unreadable. This one is succinct, rigorous, and a breeze.
I will close with this: I wish, I truly, truly wish deep down with all my heart, that one day all academics will treat their writing with this level of care and attention. It shouldn't take a (perceived) computing emergency to force people to care about their message being understood. All academics should strive to be intelligible all the time. May this book be a proof by example: it's possible to talk about important, complex things AND construct beautiful sentences. Hallelujah!!