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Bob Hughes - The Bleeding Edge: Why Technology Turns Toxic in an Unequal World

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The Bleeding Edge: Why Technology Turns Toxic in an Unequal World: summary, description and annotation

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Capitalism likes us to believe in the steady, inevitable march of progress, from the abacus to the iPad. But the historical record tells of innumerable roads not taken, all of which could have led to better, more equal worlds, and still can.

Academic and activist Bob Hughes puts flesh on the bones of the idea that another world is possible, using as evidence the technology that capitalism claims as quintessentially its own: the computer in all its forms.

Contrary to popular belief capitalism does not do innovation well instead suppressing or appropriating it. This book shows that great innovations have never emerged from capitalism per se, but always from the utopian moments that occur behind the capitalists back. And when it does embrace an innovation, the results are often the diametric opposite of what the innovators intended.

In this thorough and meticulous work Hughes argues that if we only prioritized equality over materialism then superior and more diverse technologies would emerge leading to a richer more sustainable world.

Bob Hughes is an academic, activist, and author. Formerly he taught electronic media Oxford Brookes University and now spends his time researching and campaigning against inequality. He is author of Dust or Magic, a book for digital multimedia workers, about how people do good stuff with computers. He is a member of No One is Illegal, which campaigns for the total abolition of immigration controls, for whom he has written many articles.

Bob Hughes: author's other books


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Is new technology a blessing or a curse In this engaging and powerful book - photo 1

Is new technology a blessing or a curse? In this engaging and powerful book, Bob Hughes shows it can be either - and that the answer depends, above all, on whether society is plutocratic or egalitarian. A must-read for all who care about humankinds future.

James K Boyce, University of Massachusetts Amherst, US.

Bob Hughes blows all the hype out of the water. He understands both the history and the technology. In this wonderful book he explains how inequality turns humanity into a destructive force that then uses technologies to cause harm.

Danny Dorling, Professor of Geography at the University of Oxford.

Hughes book is much needed in helping us get beyond the glib national policies that seem to take both technology and inequality as givens. The Bleeding Edge deconstructs the causes of inequality and, while helping us understand that technology is not a panacea, it lets us truly understand for whom technologies are developed and sold.

Joan Greenbaum, Professor Emerita of Environmental Psychology, City University of New York, US.

A fascinating study of how inequality inhibits technological innovations and how only an egalitarian society can truly sustain progress.

Hsiao-Hung Pai, author of Chinese Whispers, Scattered Sand, Invisible and Angry White People.

The Bleeding Edge is truly the leading edge of books that challenge us to rethink the relationship between technology, capitalism and inequality. Rejecting both apocalyptic pessimism and techno-optimism, Hughes provides a compelling map to the future in which information technologies are harnessed for the common good. Powerfully argued and easy to read, this is one of those books that can help change the world.

Betsy Hartmann, Professor Emerita of Development Studies and senior policy analyst, Population and Development Program, Hampshire College, US.

Hughes nails inequality to the wall with precision and passion. He weaves together multiple strands to make the case against inequality, from economics through anthropology; from evolutionary theory through social epidemiology. Then, once he has constructed his airtight logic, he colors it in with the emotional dimensions of life lived under oppressive hierarchy or empowering egalitarianism. Hughes book dares us to stop begging for half-measures and instead demand our human birthright: full social and economic equality!

Deborah S Rogers, President of Initiative for Equality, and affiliated to the Institute for Research in the Social Sciences at Stanford University, US.

Technology comes between us and our environment but, in this highly original book, Hughes shows how inequality comes between us and our technology. Inequality subverts technical progress, increases its environmental damage and prevents it from satisfying our real needs. This is a thesis we cannot afford to ignore.

Richard Wilkinson, Professor Emeritus of Social Epidemiology at Nottingham University, UK, and co-author of The Spirit Level.

About the author Bob Hughes worked as a schoolteacher calligrapher and in - photo 2

About the author

Bob Hughes worked as a schoolteacher, calligrapher, and in advertising before getting involved with computers in the mid-1980s, working on interactive information systems, running an interest group, and writing about the new industrys unofficial history and creative traditions. Later, he became involved in campaigning for the rights of migrants, on whose labor the digital economy is built, and was a co-founder, in 2003, of No One Is Illegal UK. He taught digital media at Oxford Brookes University till 2013, with a particular interest in publishing for social change. He now lives and writes in southern France.

Acknowledgements

This book exists thanks to the kind people who read drafts, made suggestions, and encouraged it on its way. They include: Danny Dorling, Ursula Huws, Chris McEvoy, Nick Nuttgens, Hsiao-Hung Pai, Natasha Stotesbury, Joe Shaw, Ciaran Walsh, Betsy Hartmann and Jim Boyce, Nancy Lindisfarne and Jonathan Neale, Sarah and Bob LeVine; and my friends at Oxford Brookes, especially Tom Betteridge, John LoBreglio, and all my colleagues in the Centre for Publishing Studies. I particularly want to thank Jonathan Rosenhead (emeritus professor of Operational Research at LSE), and Raul Espejo (Syncho Research, Lincoln; former leader of Chiles Cybersyn project) for their time and patient explanations, which I hope Ive not travestied.

My biggest debts are to Teresa Hayter, who lived with, read and tactfully critiqued the book as it evolved; and to New Internationalist for taking this on so wholeheartedly and so well and for being such a clear and consistent voice for sanity and justice through more than 40 years of planetary mayhem.

The Bleeding Edge Why Technology Turns Toxic in an Unequal World - image 3

New Internationalist

The Bleeding Edge Why Technology Turns Toxic in an Unequal World - image 4

The Bleeding Edge

Why technology turns toxic in an unequal world

Published in Canada by

New Internationalist Publications

2446 Bank St, Suite 653

Ottawa, Ontario

K1V 1A8

newint.org

and

Between the Lines

401 Richmond St W, Studio 277

Toronto, Ontario

M5V 3A8

btlbooks.com

First published in the UK in 2016 by New Internationalist Publications Ltd, The Old Music Hall, 106-108 Cowley Road, Oxford OX4 1JE.

Bob Hughes

The right of Bob Hughes to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1998.

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, electrostatic, magnetic tape, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without prior permission in writing of the Publisher.

Edited by Chris Brazier

Designed by Juha Sorsa

Front cover adapted by Juha Sorsa from Gustave Dors Moses breaking the tablets of the law, 1866

Indexed by Angie Hipkin

Library and Archives Canada Cataloguing in Publication

Hughes, Bob, 1947-, author

The bleeding edge: why technology turns toxic in an unequal world/Bob Hughes

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Issue print and electronic formats.

Co-published by New Internationalist.

ISBN 978-1-77113-290-9 (paperback).-

ISBN 978-1-77113-291-6 (epub).-

ISBN 978-1-77113-292-3 (pdf)

1. Computers--Social aspects. 2. Technology--Social aspects. 3. Equality. 4. Capitalism. I. Title.

QA76.9.C66H84 2016 303.48'33 C2016-903285-X C2016-903286-8

Between the Lines gratefully acknowledges the assistance of the Government of Canada through the Canada Book Fund and the Canada Council for the Arts, and the Government of Ontario through the Ontario Arts Council, the Ontario Book Publishers Tax Credit programme, and the Ontario Media Development Corporation.

Table of Contents Guide Contents Technology is neutral It is the adaptation of - photo 5

Table of Contents

Guide

Contents

Technology is neutral. It is the adaptation of knowledge to practical purpose. How we use technology and what technologies we develop is up to us. The machine is not in control, corporations and politicians are.

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