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INTERNET EMPIRE : The hidden digital war

How did we get here ?   What do we do now ?

The internet expansion of US companies has been like that of an empires of the past, though without the violence. Arguing from detailed analysis of the origins of the internet, the key product features of internet companies and the broader economic nature of war, Ennis shows the keys to the success of the new American empire, and how its rise has been a mixed blessing. Internet Empire: The Hidden Digital War then argues that wherever we may live, we can change our own behavior to make the internet economy better for our own individual and collective future.

Someone taking the book Internet Empire: The Hidden Digital War from a bookshelf

What is it about ?

The modern economy is fundamentally different from that of the past five millennia. Professor Ennis shows how the transition to a digital future generates wonderful innovation but also has a dark side that warrants our attention: the digital world has created a new, very civilized type of war, one that does not involve armies or guns but instead features bankers, optical fiber, algorithms and Birkenstock-wearing geniuses. Where digital battles are fought for foreign territory, no one dies. But in the digital war, private companies can take over and dominate foreign economic activity in ways that would be envied by Caesar and Napoleon. The author argues that the expansion of internet businesses has created an ability to achieve the aims of war without the horrific consequences.

 

Governments are taking action; but it is too little and perhaps too late. Despite their best intentions, they do not take into account how we the users make decisions and they focus unduly on company size rather than on company behaviors. Government policies over history are replete with unintended consequences; digital regulation will be no different.

 

When businesses distort and restrain markets, government policy is not enough to fight back. If the problems come from individual behavior, so does the solution. Ennis shows that individual users of the internet all have a role to play in determining the future nature of our digital economies. Building on his provocative diagnosis, he suggests 15 ways we can take back control and, in so doing, transform the internet into a fairer and healthier place that can deliver free choice.

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