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Paulina Borsook - Wikipedia Paulina Borsook is an American technology journalist and writer who has written for Wired, Mother Jones, and Suck com She is perhaps best known for her 2000 book Cyberselfish, a critique of the libertarian mindset of the digital technology community As an artist-in-residence at Stanford University, in 2013 she began work on My Life as a Ghost, an art installation based on her experiences
New York Times profiles tech critic Paulina Borsook Make sure to read this: The New York Times has profiled Paulina Borsook, the tech critic who warned of Silicon Valley’s dark side thirty years ago (I interviewed her last month on the Nerd Reich podcast ) Writes David Streitfeld of the NYT: Paulina Borsook’s “Cyberselfish” saw the seeds of disaster in the late-1990s dot-com boom, which, she argued, transformed a community that was
Cyberselfish Finds New Fans After 25 Years - The New Boston Two and a half decades after its release, Paulina Borsook’s sharp critique of tech libertarianism is getting a second look Readers and technologists are revisiting “Cyberselfish,” a book that warned how Silicon Valley’s politics could spill into public life The renewed interest comes as debates over AI, platform power, and digital policy intensify in Washington […]
Techmeme: A profile of Paulina Borsook, as her 2000 book . . . A profile of Paulina Borsook, as her 2000 book Cyberselfish, warning about Silicon Valley's love for “techno-libertarianism”, finds a resurgence in interest — Even Silicon Valley dislikes Silicon Valley — More than two-thirds of residents agreed in a 2024 poll …
Paulina Borsook’s “Cyberselfish” Resurfaces After 25 Years A prophetic critique of Silicon Valley’s libertarian fever finds new admirers Cyberselfish, the 1999 essay by cultural critic Paulina Borsook, warned that the tech industry’s embrace of radical libertarianism would shape the digital age in troubling ways