The hidden history of big brother in America How the death of privacy and the rise of surveillance threaten us and our democracy

Thom Hartmann, 1951-

Book - 2022

"This book deals with two very large and often amorphous concepts: privacy and surveillance in the context of both government and the marketplace. Both concepts have undergone changes over the millennia of recorded human history, and those changes have dramatically sped up and expanded over the past few centuries, starting with the widespread use of the printing press in the mid- to late-15th century when books and newspapers began to proliferate across Europe and the rest of the "civilized" world by the end of the 17th century. The development of radio, television and the internet in the 20th century heightened the need to define more clearly what both concepts meant and how they applied both to governments (the "public... sector") and individual and corporate players (the "private sector"). The Thought Police and Big Brother are terms introduced into the popular lexicon by George Orwell in his novel 1984; Big Brother was the overweening all-powerful government of Orwell's novel, and the Thought Police were those who managed to burrow so deeply into every citizen's behavior, speech and even thoughts that they could control or punish behavior based on the slightest deviations from orthodoxy. Orwell was only slightly off the mark. Big Brother types of government, and Thought Police types of social control, are now widespread in the world and incompatible with democracy, as I'll show in more detail later in the book. Most concerning for Americans and citizens of other "democratic" nations, the mentality of both have heavily infiltrated both American government and corporate sectors, reaching so deeply into the day-to-day details of our lives that the techniques and technologies they use can - and do -not only control, but predict our behavior"--

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Subjects
Published
Oakland : Berrett-Koehler Publishers, Inc [2022]
Language
English
Main Author
Thom Hartmann, 1951- (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
ix, 169 pages ; 18 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9781523001026
  • Introduction: The Big Picture of Social Control vs. Democracy
  • Part 1. Big Brother and Social Control
  • Big Brother and the Puritans
  • Big Brother in the Slave Trade
  • Big Brother Invents "Whiteness" to Keep Power
  • Frederick Douglass: Mental Emancipation Leads to Social Emancipation
  • Why the Founders Didn't Explicitly Protect Our Privacy
  • Privacy Evolves in US Law
  • Surveillance and Social Control in East Germany
  • US Federal and State Big Brothers
  • Democracy Requires Trust; Authoritarianism Requires Fear
  • Part 2. Big Brother and the Emergence of Surveillance Capitalism
  • The Surveillance Industry Is Booming
  • Big Brother Goes Commercial
  • Commercial Big Brother: So, You Want to Rent an Apartment?
  • Commercial Big Brother: So, You're Looking for a Job?
  • Commercial Big Brother: So, You Want to Return a Product You Bought?
  • Commercial Big Brother: So, You Want to Call Customer Service?
  • Commercial Big Brother: So, You Want to Shop for the Best Deal?
  • The Bottom Line? Your Life Is Profitable
  • Surveillance and Social Control: We Change When We're Watched
  • Social Control and Social Cooling
  • Big Data: Surveillance Monopolists
  • Part 3. Big Brother and the Real Global Info Wars
  • Privacy, Cybersecurity, National Security, and the Future of Warfare
  • How Trump Undermined Our Cybersecurity
  • When Big Brother's Marketing Is Concentrated to Lethal Levels
  • When Big Brother Trades Your Privacy for Its Own Power and Security
  • Are We Living with de Tocqueville's Kinder and Gentler Big Brother?
  • The Trump Era: A High-Water Mark of Big Brother Lies for Social Control
  • Beyond Elections: Big Brother in Social Media Can Kill
  • Part 4. Putting the Reins on Surveillance Capitalism
  • Software or Spyware?
  • Biometrics
  • The "Right to Be Forgotten"
  • YouTube, Facebook, and Porn: Regulate Social Media
  • How Much Big Brother Will Modern People Tolerate?
  • The Fourth Amendment Is Not for Sale Act of 2021
  • Are We Doomed to Live under Big Brother's Watchful Eye?
  • Notes
  • Acknowledgments
  • Index
  • About the Author
Review by Booklist Review

In this modern era where social media is ubiquitous, the multifaceted question of its influence on society at large as well as the body politic is becoming ever more crucial. Hartmann examines this phenomenon in terms of its modern impact and its historical roots. Using the Orwellian metaphor of Big Brother, he points out that many of the techniques of social control described and predicted by Orwell have their roots deep in history. Hartmann then looks at the commercialization of Big Brother in recent decades, at how Big Business has developed a booming "surveillance industry" to both cater to and influence the buying public. The rise of platforms such as Facebook has stoked great concerns over Big Brother's influence on politics--recent elections have shown just how effective Orwellian techniques of disinformation on social media can be. Hartman's analysis of this issue is intelligent, concise, and imminently frightening; fortunately, his final section offers some suggestions on how to combat what he calls "surveillance capitalism." An important addition to the literature on the effects of technology on society.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.