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Means of Control

How the Hidden Alliance of Tech and Government Is Creating a New American Surveillance State

Audiobook (Includes supplementary content)
1 of 2 copies available
1 of 2 copies available
You are being surveilled right now. This sweeping exposé reveals how the U.S. government allied with data brokers, tech companies, and advertisers to monitor us through the phones we carry and the devices in our home.
“A revealing . . . startling . . . timely . . . fascinating, sometimes terrifying examination of the decline of privacy in the digital age.”—Kirkus Reviews

“That evening, I was given a glimpse inside a hidden world. . . . An entirely new kind of surveillance program—one designed to track everyone.”
For the past five years—ever since a chance encounter at a dinner party—journalist Byron Tau has been piecing together a secret story: how the whole of the internet and every digital device in the world became a mechanism of intelligence, surveillance, and monitoring.
Of course, our modern world is awash in surveillance. Most of us are dimly aware of this: Ever get the sense that an ad is “following” you around the internet? But the true potential of our phones, computers, homes, credit cards, and even the tires underneath our cars to reveal our habits and behavior would astonish most citizens. All of this surveillance has produced an extraordinary amount of valuable data about every one of us. That data is for sale—and the biggest customer is the U.S. government.
In the years after 9/11, the U.S. government, working with scores of anonymous companies, many scattered across bland Northern Virginia suburbs, built a foreign and domestic surveillance apparatus of breathtaking scope—one that can peer into the lives of nearly everyone on the planet. This cottage industry of data brokers and government bureaucrats has one directive—“get everything you can”—and the result is a surreal world in which defense contractors have marketing subsidiaries and marketing companies have defense contractor subsidiaries. And the public knows virtually nothing about it.
Sobering and revelatory, Means of Control is the defining story of our dangerous grand bargain—ubiquitous cheap technology, but at what price?
*Includes a downloadable PDF of resources and key concepts & definitions from the book
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from February 12, 2024
      Journalist Tau debuts with a chilling chronicle of how data collection efforts by corporate and government entities have created a “digital panopticon.” In the weeks after 9/11, data broker Acxiom realized the information it collected on credit card purchases and places of residence, intended to inform targeted advertising, could also be used to recreate the movements of the attackers. The company teamed up with the U.S. government, kickstarting the latter’s attempts to build up its own data mining efforts, with help from private contractors. Tau offers novelistic accounts of this and other major milestones in the erosion of data privacy. For instance, he explains that when National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency analyst Katie Zezima mapped calls for help on Twitter to pinpoint areas in peril following the 2011 earthquake in Japan, she led one of the first government initiatives to draw “actionable information” from social media, raising legal questions that bureaucrats swept aside after realizing the data’s utility. Other stories are even more alarming, such as the use of social media by police in Ferguson, Mo., to monitor racial justice protestors in 2014 and the NSA’s breaking into Google’s network despite the company’s compliance with government investigations. Filled with shocking revelations and first-rate reporting, this will have readers thinking twice before they post. Agent: Eric Lupfer, UTA.

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  • English

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