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Kara Swisher is plugged into the world of Big Tech in a way few other people are. When she phones the heads of tech companies, they actually take her calls. She has covered the business of the internet since 1994. In 2023, Swisher was a contributing editor at New York Magazine, the host of the podcast On with Kara Swisher, and the co-host of the podcast Pivot. In 2014 she co-founded Vox Mediaās Recode. From 2018 to 2022, she was an opinion writer for The New York Times before re-joining Vox Media. She has also written for the Wall Street Journal, the Washington Post, the All Things Digital conference and the online publication All Things D.
According to Wikipedia, she studied propaganda and received a BS in literature and journalism from the Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service at Georgetown University in 1984. One year later, she received her MS in journalism from Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism. She also āspent some timeā at Duke University studying misinformation and propaganda, which Swisher says were āalways my area of study.ā
To say Swisher is knowledgeable about all things digital is a gross understatement. In her latest book, Burn Book: A Tech Love Story, Swisher takes her readers on a tour through the back alleys of the tech world to show them how Big Tech has influenced the world of politics as well as information and brought us to the brink of a fascist takeover. Her publisher, Simon & Schuster, says Burn Book is āa witty, scathing, but fair accounting of the tech industry and its founders who wanted to change the world but broke it instead. Part memoir, part history, Burn Book is a necessary chronicle of techās most powerful players. This is the inside story weāve all been waiting for about modern Silicon Valley and the biggest boom in wealth creation in the history of the world.ā
Kara Swisher Tells It Like It Is
On February 15, 2024, Swisher published an excerpt of her book as an op-ed piece for the Washington Post. It is a long and interesting read. It deserves your attention because it casts a light on how the tech world operates for one purpose only ā profits ā and how that focus has promoted the breakdown in civil discourse that allows the fossil fuel industry to harass and harry climate scientists with impunity, for instance, and promotes the rise of fascism in the US and many other countries around the world. Hereās a taste:
If I had to pick the moment when it all went off the rails for the tech industry, Iād choose Saturday morning, Dec. 10, 2016, when Iā¦got a tip: The crowned heads of Silicon Valleyās most powerful tech companies had been summoned to tromp into Manhattanās Trump Tower and meet the man who had unexpectedly just been elected president and was the antithesis of all they supposedly represented.
āSkulkā was more like it. The only reason I was hearing about the tech summit was because one of techās top-tier players had not been invited because of his āliberal leaningsā and āoutspoken oppositionā to President-elect Donald Trump. The outcast called me in a lather. āSucking up to that corpulent loser who never met a business he didnāt drive straight into a wall, itās shameful,ā he said. āCan you believe it? Can you believe it?ā
After decades of covering the nascent internet industry from its birth, I could believe itā¦An increasing number of these once fresh-faced wunderkinds I had mostly rooted for now made me feel like a parent whose progeny had turned into, well, assholes.
Musk Thought He Could āHandleā Trump
My first call was to one of the potentates who was sometimes testy, often funny and always accessible. Of everyone I had covered, I could count on Elon Musk, chief executive of Tesla and SpaceX, to engage with me on a semi-human basis. While Musk would morph later into a troll-king-at-scale on Twitter, which he would rename X, he was among the few tech titans who did not fall back on practiced talking points, even if he might have been the one who most should have.
So, what did Musk think of Trumpās invitation? The meeting had no stated agenda, which made it clear to me that it had nothing to do with policy and everything to do with a photo op. āYou shouldnāt go,ā I warned him. āTrumpās going to screw you.ā Musk disagreed. He told me he would attend, adding he had already joined a business council for the president-elect, too. When I brought up Trumpās constant divisive fearmongering and campaign promises to unravel progress on issues ranging from immigration to gay rights, Musk dismissed the threats.
āI can convince him,ā he assured me. āI can influence him,ā he told me. Apparently, Musk thought his very presence would turn the fetid water into fine wine, since he had long considered himself more than just a man but an icon and, on some days, a god. āGood luck with that,ā I thought to myself as we hung up.
The Takeaway For Big Tech
Itās difficult to add to what Kara Swisher has to say. She has seen it all from the inside, the transition from doing good to doing right well, financially speaking. Our supposed heroes in Big Tech are no more than grifters, sucking dollars out of advertisers by using tech tricks to boost page views. Magazines and newspapers used to base their advertising rates on the number of subscribers they had. Now it is clicks that count, and the tech industry has mastered how to inflate their click counts to fatten their corporate coffers.
Legislatures sat sleepy-eyed while tech took off. They exempted them from liability for libel and slander by creating Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act of 1996. As PBS explains, Section 230 states that āno provider or user of an interactive computer service shall be treated as the publisher or speaker of any information provided by another information content provider.ā
That legal phrasing shields companies that can host trillions of messages from being sued into oblivion by anyone who feels wronged by something someone else has posted ā whether their complaint is legitimate or not. It is what prevented Michael Mann from pursuing legal action against two internet publishers who published an article comparing him to a child molester and sexual predator.
Big tech faces no consequences for its antisocial behavior and so it continues to become more and more aggressive in its pandering to peopleās worst behavior. It normalizes behavior that is scandalous and salacious. It puts a premium on hate speech and death threats. It takes the basest instincts of people and celebrates them, all to drive traffic and increase ad revenues.
Swisher opens the door and lets us see the rot and decay at the core of the tech world. Now the question is what to do about this fetid mess. She offers no solutions, but our readers may have some suggestions. Please share them with us in the comments section.
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