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Terms of Disservice

How Silicon Valley Is Destructive by Design

Dipayan Ghosh
Release Date: June 16, 2020

Designing a new digital social contact for our technological future

High technology presents a paradox. In just a few decades, it has transformed the world, making almost limitless quantities of information instantly available to billions of people and reshaping businesses, institutions, and even entire economies. But it also has come to rule our lives, addicting many of us to the march of megapixels across electronic screens both large and small.

Despite its undeniable value, technology is exacerbating deep social and political divisions in many societies. Elections influenced by fake news and unscrupulous hidden actors, the cyber-hacking of trusted national institutions, the vacuuming of private information by Silicon Valley behemoths, ongoing threats to vital infrastructure from terrorist groups and even foreign governments—all these concerns are now part of the daily news cycle and are certain to become increasingly serious into the future.

In this new world of endless technology, how can individuals, institutions, and governments harness its positive contributions while protecting each of us, no matter who or where we are?

In this book, a former Facebook public policy adviser who went on to assist President Obama in the White House offers practical ideas for using technology to create an open and accessible world that protects all consumers and civilians. As a computer scientist turned policymaker, Dipayan Ghosh answers the biggest questions about technology facing the world today. Proving clear and understandable explanations for complex issues, Terms of Disservice will guide industry leaders, policymakers, and the general public as we think about how we ensure that the Internet works for everyone, not just Silicon Valley.

Praise for Terms of Disservice

With subject expertise and a lively writing, Dipayan Ghosh provides a rare and important examination of the underlying problems of Big Tech today: the business models.
Cecilia Kang, technology reporter, New York Times

One of the greatest challenges to confronting misinformation and disinformation is being able to define the problem in the first placeand Ghosh helps us to follow the money. We won’t begin to solve this urgent problem unless we confront the market incentives that make it not just viable, but profitable. In this book, Ghosh helps us take a big leap forward in understanding the business model that underpins fake newsand how we can start to do something about it.
Robby Mook, founder, Defending Digital Democracy Project, Harvard Kennedy School; former campaign manager, Hillary for America

Terms of Disservice bravely goes after the root of all internet evilthe consumer surveillance business model, a dire threat to our privacy, democracy, and way of life.
Bruce Reed, former chief of staff for Vice President Joe Biden, head of domestic policy for President Bill Clinton

Lively, visual, and relentlessly clear-eyed, Terms of Disservice offers a disturbing evidence-backed portrait of a digital economy now cursed by catastrophic success.
Jonathan Zittrain, George Bemis Professor of International Law, Harvard Law School

Powerful internet platforms, driven by a ruthless commercial logic, have caused tremendous harm in the United States and around the world. With technological sophistication and crystal-clear writing, Terms of Disservice provides the analytical tools necessary to understand the structural roots of this crisis and the policies we need to confront it. Anyone who thinks democracy is worth saving should read this compelling book.
Victor Pickard, professor, University of Pennsylvania; author of Democracy Without Journalism? Confronting the Misinformation Society

Ghosh’s deep knowledge of the way digital companies undermine our cognition, agency, and democracy is scary but required reading. Thankfully, his deep faith in the ability of government and civil society to develop a new social contract makes this a hopeful and actionable proposal.
Douglas Rushkoff, professor of media theory and digital economics, Queens College; author of Team Human

Terms of Disservice addresses the big picture of social mediaboth its place in our national economy and its corrosive effect on the individual. Ghosh concludes with a proposal for a social contract that preserves the strengths of social media while respecting the autonomy of the individual. The result is a roadmap for policymakerswe can only hope that they pay attention.
Stephen B. Wicker, professor, Cornell University; author of Cellular Convergence and the Death of Privacy

Author

Dipayan Ghosh is the Pozen Fellow and directs the Platform Accountability Project at the Harvard Kennedy School. A computer scientist by training, he has served as a technology and economic policy adviser in the Obama White House and as a Privacy and Public Policy Adviser at Facebook.


Media Coverage

PBS Newshour 20/10/2020

The Motivations and Merits of the DOJ’s lawsuit against Google

Social media takes baby steps in dealing with hate speech. Time to grow up?

Slate 30/10/2020

Big Tech Needs an Entirely New Business Model

Axios 28/10/2020

Right-wing misinformation could gain steam post-election

Forbes 28/10/2020

There Is No Help On The Horizon To Protect Businesses From Disinformation, Misinformation

NBC News 27/10/2020

From the DOJ’s Google lawsuit to a new House report, antitrust is on the 2020 ballot

ABC News 18/10/2020

What social media giants are doing to counter misinformation this election

Brookings.edu 11/08/2020

Utilities for democracy: Why and how the algorithmic infrastructure of Facebook and Google must be regulated

Slate 17/07/2020

Don’t Give Up on Your Digital Privacy Yet

Wired 07/07/2020

India’s TikTok Ban Dispels the Myth of the ‘China Bogeyman’