Well damn. This is quite the book.
David’s examination of the phenomenon which he terms ‘meganets’ is simultaneously fascinating and horrifying. This book will give you a much clearer understanding of the fundamentally uncontrollable nature of many of the technological forces in our life and how they have and continue to radically shape human engagement with the world. David’s unique experience in this world, combined with his ability to shape the story into a compelling narrative, make this a unique book that I think anyone interested in technology’s impact on our lives would benefit from reading.
The one point of contention I had with the book is in the final chapter where he shares his thoughts on the way forward. Although the rest of the book was literally blowing my mind with insights into the problem, I felt like his solutions missed the main point - that meganets are born from the melding of human and machine interaction, but that the issues which arise from meganets are completely dependent upon what the humans choose to do. The technology simply amplifies those choices with volume, velocity and virality, leading to the negative outcomes we experience every day.
David’s solutions though, all focus on the tech side of problem, looking at how to slow down the three V’s, but in my opinion that is simply treating the symptom and not the root cause. The root cause is a degradation in human character which has been drastically accelerated in modern times - but even deeper than that, it is a problem with sinful human nature. While the technical solutions may hold back the tide a little, they will never make a fundamental difference because humans will always find new ways to indulge our sinful nature. But as powerful as the meganets are, they simply cease to function without the input of human beings. So from my point of view, the single best thing we can do to help change the (currently dire) outlook of our collective future, is to develop godly character in ourselves, our families, and those around us.
Favorite Quote: “Artificial intelligence, deep learning in particular, has gained great appeal as a possible way of regaining control over the meganet. Because of the sheer opacity of AI and its algorithmic unreliability, however, its effect will instead be to amplify the uncertainty and loss of control we are already experiencing. There's always the possibility that At may finally achieve its long dreamt-of goal of truly understanding the human, bringing human-level cognition to superhuman size, but the odds are slim. If anything, AI will gain purchase not through advances on its own but through meganets conditioning humans to behave in less complicated and more orderly ways, which Al will be better able to capture. Ironically, for all the worries about a Skynet-like AI taking over the world, the genuine threat to human self-determination is a meganet-driven system that relies not on super powerful AI but on the inscrutable collective impulses of groups of humans organized through fairly rote computation. Technology does not threaten to build an evil mastermind but an incomprehensible ecology of computationalized winds blowing us in unpredictable directions.”