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Burn Book: A Tech Love Story

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From award-winning journalist Kara Swisher comes a witty, scathing, but fair accounting of the tech industry and its founders who wanted to change the world but broke it instead.

Part memoir, part history, Burn Book is a necessary chronicle of tech’s most powerful players. This is the inside story we’ve all been waiting for about modern Silicon Valley and the biggest boom in wealth creation in the history of the world.

When tech titans crowed that they would “move fast and break things,” Kara Swisher was moving faster and breaking news. While covering the explosion of the digital sector in the early 1990s, she developed a long track record of digging up and reporting the facts about this new world order. Her consistent scoops drove one CEO to accuse her of “listening in the heating ducts” and prompted Facebook’s Sheryl Sandberg to once observe: “It is a constant joke in the Valley when people write memos for them to say, ‘I hope Kara never sees this.’”

While still in college, Swisher got her start at The Washington Post, where she became one of the few people in journalism interested in covering the nascent Internet. She went on to work for The Wall Street Journal, joining with Walt Mossberg to start the groundbreaking D: All Things Digital conference, as well as pioneering tech news sites.

Swisher has interviewed everyone who matters in tech over three decades, right when they presided over an explosion of world-changing innovation that has both helped and hurt our world. Steve Jobs, Jeff Bezos, Elon Musk, Bill Gates, Sheryl Sandberg, Bob Iger, Larry Page and Sergey Brin, Meg Whitman, Peter Thiel, Sam Altman, and Mark Zuckerberg are just a few whom Swisher made sweat—figuratively and, in Zuckerberg’s case, literally.

Despite the damage she chronicles, Swisher remains optimistic about tech’s potential to help solve problems and not just create them. She calls upon the industry to make better, more thoughtful choices, even as a new set of powerful AI tools are poised to change the world yet again. At its heart, this book is a love story to, for, and about tech from someone who knows it better than anyone.

320 pages, Hardcover

First published February 27, 2024

About the author

Kara Swisher

4 books191 followers

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 858 reviews
Profile Image for Radiantflux.
458 reviews476 followers
April 25, 2024
18th book for 2024.
Audiobook—Author Reading

When I was a psychology undergraduate at university in Australia in the early 1990s I was given access to the university VAX computers as part of our compulsory statistics course. This was still a time when typing up an essay, with errors corrected in tippex was seen as fancy, most students still handwrote course assignments, and most professors still hadn't learnt of email, and HTML was a few years away.

What my professor didn't know was that having a VAX account came along with Internet access and when I realized this I went wild. Suddenly I had access to email and Usenet discussion groups. On a backgammon group I suggested we stop talking about games and actually play them, and so ended up running the first International BG tournament through my statistics account—non-trivial as email was the sole form of communication for players (how do you show a board? how do you roll dice in a way that players see as fair?). My professor commended me for being so hard working as my time online was audited.

It's clear from her account that Swisher got the Internet as I did, and took the jump, leaving a golden path to politics reporter at the Washington Post to the (then) very niche job of tech reporter on the West Coast. She was there at the beginning and broke many key stories on Silicon Valley as it developed, and in the process becoming a Silicon Valley icon herself.

So this book should have been a easy win for me. However, it turned out to be a vapid nothingburger. The book is made up of chapters where Swisher mostly bashes Internet founders as narcissistic white man children—something I can get behind—but her analysis is so shallow it basically exists at the level of name calling. The Google Founders are labelled the weird twins and criticised in a mild way for ripping off intellectual property. Mark Zuckerberg is apparently still a teenage arsehole that sweats a lot when he's nervous. Bezos is super ambitious and given a star for getting internet delivery sorted out—but is also an arsehole. Musk was apparently a great guy until he bought Twitter and ruined it for Swisher (what about all the shitty things he did before then with Tesla??). Steve Jobs was an arsehole, but a visionary and so he gets a pass. Nothing she says is interesting or deep or new here.

The other chapters are a sort of Wikipedia style summary of her life. She got a job here, she dated so and so, married someone else, had a child, started this business or that business. None of it is anywhere deep or personal enough to be of much interest. Most of this seems to be either to puff-up her self worth or aid in her slagging off of this or that boss from decades past. She also has this annoying habit of constantly talking about how "tough" she is, how "mean but fair" she is. Isn't that what any decent journalist is?

The only thing I'll take from the book is Sergey Brin's baby shower in 2008, where the rich and famous attendees were forced to choose between wearing nappies or onesies, and could drink expensive vodka dripping from an ice statue's nipple.

Normally I don't give one-stars, as I usually abandon these sorts of books before the end, but since I finished this one I'll rate it.

1-star.
Profile Image for Neville.
36 reviews
February 29, 2024
I really wanted to like this. But there wasn't a lot of new info here, especially if you've followed Kara's work for a while. Most times I felt like it was collation of multiple opinion blog posts rather than a cohesive story.
Profile Image for Phil.
413 reviews
July 1, 2024
After the first few chapters I wanted to give this one 5 stars. Author is a smart, sharp writer and fellow Hoya (Georgetown grad) placed in the front row of the nascent internet world. Her prickly personality seems ideal for skewering both the old media overlords and the white bros of new tech money.

But about half way through I grew tired of her superior and sanctimonious tone. She seems to loathe every technology innovator except for Steve Jobs for whom she has an enduring crush on in spite of his many documented deficiencies about which she makes no mention.

In today’s world, and as always, there are people who make things happen and then those like this author who watch the genius unfold and then launch criticisms from the sidelines like an angry sports fan who claims to know the game better than the athletes. Ugh.

I get that she views herself as the “hey these emperors have no clothes” type, as most journalists do. But I’m much more a fan of those who are at least trying to make a better world, and not so much of the bystanders who smugly complain, ironically, via the technology hardware and social media platforms created by the targets of their vitriol.

IMHO she should have taken all the upstart investment opportunities she so proudly likes to remind us she repeatedly resisted, but she prefers to reside on the hill of self-believing moral and intellectual superiority. I guess I’m in no position to judge, though, since I’ve never been a journalist covering tech people and yet I’m now complaining about one via my keyboard.
Profile Image for Ada-Marie.
401 reviews6 followers
March 6, 2024
I really enjoy Kara Swisher’s podcasts. This book is kind of a general history of modern tech with some personal anecdotes. The tone of the book feels strangely arrogant, like she knows better than all of these brilliant tech revolutionaries. Maybe should have been called Brag Book? ;)
Profile Image for E.R. Burgess.
Author 1 book20 followers
March 4, 2024
The greatest technology reporter of the age adds to her legacy with a thoughtful, funny, and essential review of her years dissecting Silicon Valley lunacy for us. For fans of her work (including me, for sure), we get a greatest hits book with her additional acerbic content as she dresses down the powerful and calls out the insanity that reigns supreme among the Tech Bros. Somehow, she's tougher than any of them. More importantly, she enables the rest of us to better understand where tech is going and what it means because it affects our whole lives now more than ever before.
Profile Image for Tom Kubina.
65 reviews7 followers
March 17, 2024
The author mocks famous tech founders calling them children while she herself behave childishly, just in another way.

The book is so sarcastic and pretends to be above things so much, that it drowns in a "he's such an asshole" swamp with them. It spends so much time on bullshiting that it forgets what it wants to be about and doesn't have time to go deeper.

It wanted to be a "fair accounting of the tech industry and its founders who wanted to change the world but broke it instead." But it is neither accounting nor fair.

It contains just a few stories that tell you, all around, how Kara is important because she texts with these "moguls". She doesn't forget to say "I knew it." or "I told him" everytime someone did something wrong.

There's nothing new in the book you wouldn't already know about famous tech founders. It doesn't bring different perspective on these powerfull and dangerous men either. It's just childish rant.
Profile Image for Parker.
114 reviews4 followers
April 4, 2024
Easiest five stars I've given. Many readers seem to think that the point of this razor-sharp, rich, hilarious tome is that it will offer new insight into the motivations of Silicon Valley tech CEOs, but to me, it's not really about the techies. It's about getting to see the world, for 300+ glorious pages, through the eyes of Swisher. Her insight always hits home and gives me real, substantive hope for the future.

As I navigate another "night sweats"-inducing term of Operation Electrical Engineering Degree—a pursuit that often fills me with despair and rage as I find myself, class after class, being one of the astonishingly few wamen in room—I have taken to carrying this book in my backpack as a talisman to ward off the darkness. It works. I was on a Zoom call yesterday and had this book propped up to serve as my "Support Swisher." As I prepared to unmute myself to speak (gross!) I looked into those burning aviators and felt the fear dissipate.

(Read this book. Listen to her podcasts.)
Profile Image for Lucas van Lierop.
25 reviews8 followers
February 28, 2024
It’s fine. There’s pretty much nothing new in it. If you listen to pivot, or have even marginally followed Kara’s career, save your money.
Profile Image for John Devlin.
Author 28 books92 followers
May 17, 2024
(1.7) So I had no idea who Kara swisher is. This book came across the transom probably carried on some best of the new year books, but it was about tech history so I figured sure, seems intriguing…

Burn Book tells some bare bones origin story of the girl who would become a reporter and then an early insider on the emerging tech colossus in Silicon Valley…

And her rather acerbic takes on that industry are a obviously well informed but with like so many people today she just can’t stop herself from disgorging her left wing beliefs…

Author’s note here —of the last dozen books I’ve read Shakespeare in a divided country, Knife, Barbara Streisand and now Burn Book..these people can’t stop writing about Donald Trump; Orange Shrek really has eaten their brains..

““If Trump publicly commits to embrace science, stops threatening censorship of the Internet, rejects fake news, and denounces hate against our diverse employees,
then it would make sense for tech leaders to visit Trump Tower. Short of that, they are being used to legitimize a fascist.”

“But just imagine if they’d had those supercharged tools. Well, Trump did, and he won the election, thanks in large part to social media.”

No, Trump didn’t win an election bc of social media…

“My minor in college was in Holocaust studies. I studied propaganda, and I could see Trump was an expert at it. I knew exactly where this was headed.”

More hysterical nonsense…These folks afflicted with auto-erotic Trump dysphoria can’t decide if he’s a Buffoon or an evil mastermind.

“only six months after a mob attacked the Capitol on January 6, 2021. Social media, particularly Facebook, played a role in the ability of then President Donald Trump and his minions to amplify hate and lies and spin them into violence”
Yes, Trump was a sore loser and pursued many legal remedies that were undergirded with weak statutory analysis…but his lawsuits were relevant enough that Congress rewrote part of the electoral count act to clarify the law.

““Trump Is Too Dangerous for Twitter.” I called on the platform to ban him, predicting what could happen if it did not”
..of course we now know from the Twitterfiles that the govt was pressuring all the social media platforms using all its powers through regular meeting with the FBI to control what people could read and discuss. The govt was found guilty of censorship in its case in Murthy v Missouri as a spinoff of its Kara sanctioned machinations…

More Trump nonsense, “When I heard a Silicon Valley billionaire had paid E. Jean Carroll’s legal bills in her victorious sexual assault case against former President Donald Trump, I knew it had to be Hoffman. “Supporting women fighting for progress and justice in philanthropy, politics, and business has been a longstanding priority of mine, as is supporting America against the threat of Trump”

The great irony is 15 years after she alleged Trump sexually assaulted her Carroll went on FB to proclaim, “what’s your favorite show on Sundays. I love the Apprentice”
Let me be clear, no woman who was raped 15 years later announces to the world her rapist’s tv show was her favorite..

Another beef with Kara is she’s always pushing this follow your dream mentality,
“For the past 33 years, I have looked in the mirror every morning and asked myself: “If today were the last day of my life, would I want to do what I am about to do today?” And whenever the answer has been “No” for too many days in a row, I know I need to change something.” Steve Jobs, who Kara has so much praise for…

Facts: Jobs was a truly awful person. his relationships with women were treacherous, he denied his own child’s existence and was fine with her living on welfare…he once railed at his daughter’s friend for ordering meat at a restaurant…the girl was ten..

Jobs was a singularly lucky person who happened to live down the block from computer geek named Wozniak…he had no tech knowledge, he couldn’t even solder. His most insightful moments were when he visited an Oregon commune and picked up pointers on controlling folks from some hippy guru.

After discovering he had the utra rare type of pancreatic cancer that could be cured by surgery, Jobs demurred and spent 9months eating carrots and engaging in holistic quackery. This pause doomed him.



And her next target…

“No, Zuckerberg wasn’t an asshole. He was worse. He was one of the most carelessly dangerous men in the history of technology who didn’t even know it. Unfortunately, he wasn’t the worst of them.
made a huge external mess. Sites like Facebook, YouTube, and Twitter spread hate speech.”

So, here’s another theme of Kara’s: hate speech, dis and misinformation are all just terrible. As a reporter, I find her understanding of the first amendment shocking but predictable in today’s society…also, predictably, Kara never actually gives any remedies for this hate speech…btw…there is no thing as hate speech…it’s just speech you don’t like and it’s protected. Kara labors under the misinformed notion that she gets to believe in a democratic republic that asks for its citizens to be active and engaged and yet feels the overwhelming need to curate the information for the poor deluded masses.


“I’d been to this sexist rodeo before when I worked for John McLaughlin and saw how his casual sexual harassment ruined the lives of his targets.”

McLaughlin was a curmudgeonly, rude, and sexist old man who made his staff do menial tasks…Kara fails to show who’s lives he “ruined”

Her most ludicrous assertion folllows—
“I still felt like sexism was never going away—I could see it everywhere, sometimes comically. Standing outside a holiday party for one of Uber’s earliest and most loyal investors at his fabulous mansion, I was dumbfounded to see an actual reindeer in the driveway greeting guests on the way in. The investor had rented the huge creature as a prop, a decoration, and, I suppose, as an example of his growing wealth, much as he had put his pricey cars on display at previous events. The reindeer was visibly wilting and looked decidedly uncomfortable in the far too warm climate, so I asked the minder if the animal was going to be okay. “It’s not an ideal situation, but she’ll be fine,” the minder responded. Of course, it was a female reindeer. Unable to do anything but stare, all I could think was that she was anything but fine.”

Next, I figured she would launch into a diatribe over how sexist Santa was for only employing male reindeer.

“truly believe that you should push yourself in areas where you are passionate, and if you don’t feel passion toward something, get out of it.” That philosophy doesn’t work for all the folks who aren’t even average…and that’s half the population.



.



And now comes her oh so fashionable hatred of Elon Musk, “Steve Jobs would have abhorred Musk.”
Speaking for the dead shouldn’t be done by a reporter who has only a passing knowledge of the men in question.

Additionally, Musk has a degree in Econ and physics…Jobs quit college almost immediately.

Musk was an engineer who was fixing code on Tesla’s factory floor…Jobs couldn’t solder.

Musk was such an innovative physicist he could look at his son’s Hot Wheel and ask why they couldn’t mold the entire body of a Tesla this way…

Musk has nearly half a dozen successful companies…Jobs had a good aesthetic sense, got fired from Apple, failed with Next, invested in Pixar, and then saved Apple…the accomplishment of the former shine far brighter.


“I’ve since abandoned any hope of redemption, as idiocy has piled on top of idiocy, none of which has made Twitter a better business or a better product.”
Really, Kara? Musk cut 75% of the workforce and Twitter works fine.

Andrew Ross Sorkin—whom he inexplicably referred to as “Jonathan”—to “go fuck yourself.”

First off, petty silliness, and Musk’s point was he was not going to be blackmailed by money. Kara is either obtuse here or benighted.

Supposedly Musk has tweeted, “transphobic, homophobic, conspiracy drenched, and tweeter of unfunny memes”

And yet Kara supplies no examples.

“His solution was to start a strange company called Neuralink to create a chip implant to improve the brain’s bandwidth and be upgradable. It’s an interesting and unproven gambit and also controversial for many reasons”

A quadriplegic is now using neuralink to vastly increase his life’s happiness…but Kara isn’t satisfied

“Yoel Roth, the former head of Twitter’s trust and safety department, was subject to an inaccurate accusation by Musk that forced him to leave his home after death threats, as well as a series of nothing-burger allegations about content moderation.”

As twitterfiles revealed, Roth was far out of his depth…the guy had a PhD in Grindr and was being big footed by govt Intel to suppress hunters laptop.

Overall, this putative hard hitting, take no quarter, speak truth to the geeky tech bros is mired in her leftist delusions that have left her anchored to a broken mindset.
Profile Image for Christine Nolfi.
Author 22 books3,935 followers
April 20, 2024
With razor-sharp wit and decades experience reporting on tech, Swisher takes us behind the scenes to meet the digital revolution’s powerful insiders who continue to shape our world. Elon Musk believes Swisher’s no-holds-barred reportage makes her an a**. I think she’s brilliant.
Profile Image for Hannah Im.
1,364 reviews21 followers
July 16, 2024
Felt more like a commerce summary of big tech than an insider’s view. Didn’t fell like there was anything special about this book. I could’ve googled most of it.
Profile Image for Katy O..
2,595 reviews712 followers
March 14, 2024
I adore Kara Swisher and adored this book and am so happy I chose to listen to it via reading it in print - her very distinctive voice really brings it to life for anyone used to listening to her interviews and podcast. She’s absolutely no nonsense but somehow also hilarious as hell and gives ZERO FUCKS but is also deeply professional and empathetic.

Side note: I maintain that my dream presidential ticket is Swisher - Cuban ~ they’d fix it ALL.

Source: Audible credit
Profile Image for Martha Klems.
102 reviews
March 10, 2024
Meh.

The billionaire (mostly) boys of tech that Kara reports on seem to be a boring bunch of businessmen. They were educated enough to capitalize on a technology that had just became ripe for some to write or buy the programs that made them rich. And she was smart enough to make this tech her beat. Still, it's all pretty dull.

If you want to read a beautifully written book about real geniuses to see how truly great minds think, read The Maniac by Benjamin Labatut. THAT is a great read and worth your time.
Profile Image for Megan.
46 reviews4 followers
April 19, 2024
After finishing Burn Book, which was admittedly very entertaining, I read the NYT review. It articulated better than I can what I found vexing and ultimately frustrating:

“There is a compelling tension here: Even as Swisher is rising into “Silicon Valley royalty,” as a 2014 New York magazine profile put it, Silicon Valley is, in her telling, descending into the gutter. This tension is scarcely acknowledged in those chapters that detail her relationship with various leading Tech figures. These seem instead designed to bolster her reputation as a fearless but fair-minded, straight-talking reporter…

Her forthrightness goes some way in helping us believe that “Burn Book” doesn’t merely represent a convenient pivot, as they say, from Tech royalty to Tech heretic at a time when strident industry criticism is trending hard. But “Burn Book”’s fatal flaw, the reason it can never fully dispel the whiff of opportunism that dooms any memoir, is that Swisher never shows in any convincing detail how her entanglement with Silicon Valley clouded her judgment. The story of her change of heart is thus undercut by the self-aggrandizing portrait that rests stubbornly at its core.”
Profile Image for Kristi.
911 reviews66 followers
May 7, 2024
This is tough to rate: my enjoyment of this book is maybe a 3, I think mainly due to already knowing the majority of these stories from Swisher’s journalism and podcast with Galloway. I am a huge fan of her work; I don’t know another journalist who has seen the birth of the tech industry like she has and remained completely unafraid to ask tough questions and consistently call out bad behavior and dangerous deeds. The trajectory of tech, from Al Gore era internet to early Apple/Microsoft/Amazon/Netflix to Open AI, as viewed by her is remarkable. Her perspective is refreshing and her takes are rarely wrong. However, not a lot of new info for folks who have followed her career.
Profile Image for Melissa.
134 reviews6 followers
March 7, 2024
3.5 stars. I like Kara Swisher. She is full of swagger and she’s a good storyteller. Reading about how she’s dominated (or at least countered) so many of the big men of tech is a delight, and I especially enjoyed her stories about working for John McLaughlin when she was beginning her career (how does one find such confidence at such a young age?!).

This is a memoir, but it’s also chronicle of how the internet went from being a playground full of idealistic promise to the hellscape it’s now become.
Profile Image for Thomas.
45 reviews
June 23, 2024
It was fun seeing a different side of all the faces we know from tech and I liked how each chapter corresponded to a different person. I would have surprisingly actually enjoyed more of Kara Swisher’s introspection on why she has all these relationships, why they all trust her, and how she weighs being a journalist while also being so intimate.
Profile Image for Thomas.
Author 1 book31 followers
March 21, 2024
I am really not the right person to write an objective review of this book. There’s so much name recognition here. It all takes me back to when I used to religiously listen to This Week in Tech every week along with some other shows on the twit network. I kind of gave up all that as the technology news kept getting darker and darker and I got more and more into listening to audiobooks instead. Still, those are good memories.

I can only say that I thoroughly enjoyed this one. I also have to laugh when I read other reviewers complaining about how Swisher made this book all about herself. Maybe they need to look up the meaning of the word memoir.

Anyway, I highly recommend this one for anyone interested in Silicon Valley and all that it has wrought.
388 reviews
March 11, 2024
While Kara Swisher is an astute and storied tech reporter, this book left a lot to be desired. More a tell-all of leaders and less insight. For anyone who reads regularly, much of this is already well-known. It seems like someone who was paid to write a book not fully formed and forced their way through for the money. Journalists don’t often seem to make great book writers and the writing was more less more staid vignette than capturing. Some unique and interesting quotes and stories interspersed few and far between a lot of uninteresting celebrity stories and gossip. Still like the author and in awe of her achievements, just prefer her in other formats where she shines.
Profile Image for Anne Meyer.
258 reviews3 followers
April 9, 2024
I didn't know who the author was prior to reading this book, and I had no interest in any part of the book that related to her personal life. Swisher spends WAY too much time congratulating herself on her career and her connections. The "insider" information wasn't even that exciting. I wasn't exactly surprised to learn that the kings of tech are all man-babies.
Profile Image for Wendelle.
1,783 reviews54 followers
Read
May 3, 2024
(read 1/2) I think part of the intent of this book was to provide timely, skewering critiques of the world's technocrats. However, the book is limited by its structure-- brief chapters focusing on the personal quirks, antics, and personalities of the leaders of tech, with sort of superficial swipes rather than systemic deep dives on societal repercussions. Thus, it kind of ends up with the opposite effect, which is buttressing the mythologizing of these leaders (ie, according to Swisher: Job is a cool visionary, Bill Gates is 'uncool' but has a lifelong love of learning, Zuckerberg is 'sweaty' but idolizes Augustus, Jerry Yang is a friendly guy, Sergey Brin is funny and friendly and talks a mile a minute, etc.) Nevertheless, Kara Swisher already has a deep longstanding legacy of speaking 'truth to power' in tech with candid interviews. I just thought this book would be her memoir of sorts, a deep reflection of her long-spanning career as a tech journalist covering the Silicon Valley scene since 1994-- and thus carrying weight with the more meaningful reflections of an elder statesman of journalism. However, this book is more of a romp through the gallery of tech's famous personalities, and if you are looking more for a book about having VIP hall pass access to them, this book is a good read for that.
Profile Image for Lauren.
102 reviews
July 6, 2024
really craving a political reporter as logical, confident and unafraid as kara during this current election season.

4.5 stars.
Profile Image for Giovanna Valenti.
135 reviews
April 6, 2024
2.5 but rounding up. Listened to the audiobook read by the author. She is a very eloquent narrator.


I really tried to like this more. I just had no desire to keep picking it back up and had to force myself to finish before the library took it back. Kara is definitely a badass, doesn't care what anyone thinks, hard working journalist. I wanted to love her, but she is also incredibly full of herself. Over and over, she would talk about how she knew a new venture would fail or how she knew a business deal that happened was a bad idea. Only one time did she admit to being wrong about something. She even states she may come across as "rude" to people, but I don't even think it's that. She puts herself on a pedestal above all the tech executives except maybe Steve Jobs. She has only a tiny list of people she claims to like, which sometimes seemed like maybe even those people she didn't really like that much.

I will say there was one chapter that touched on women and how they are treated in the workplace that I found spot on. At one point, she says something along the lines of "top executive men in tech didn't care about the discomfort of women because they had never felt discomfort themselves." Beautifully said for more scenarios than just tech. She also believes that "the next generation is more aware." This is something I do hope she is right about because women deserve better in the workplace and in life.
Profile Image for Chris.
50 reviews1 follower
Read
March 10, 2024
No greater authority on the business of tech than Kara Swisher. Her Pivot podcast has been a can’t-miss for me since 2020, and this book helped me figure out why I love it. Kara isn’t always nice, but she lives by her values in a way few of us have the courage to do. Some of her “burns” feel risky, but they are never without reason. I appreciate someone with such a platform using it to say things not all of us feel we can. And I can’t argue her central thesis that the industry has always been — like all private industry — all about money in the end.

Some fun history lessons in here for those of us who weren’t paying as much attention in the 90s/early 00s! And the mental image of someone trying to get Kara Swisher to go down an absurd in-office slide is hilarious.
Profile Image for Bess.
461 reviews3 followers
April 17, 2024
Those who live in glass houses shouldn’t thrown stones.
I found the author to be extremely judgmental and blind to the fact that she shares many of the same (mostly negative) characteristics she labels the people she interviews.

She is smarter than the people she interviews, she is smarter than her employers, she is smarter then the titans that came up with the idea to make them a titan. Everyone has tried to hire her at some point because she is just that prophetic and yet she chose to stay on the noble path and “only” earn $1m as a journalist vs. selling out to corporate greed. She also sees nothing wrong with her behavior to compromise family members and propel her own career under the guise of “because I am an esteemed journalist”, my actions are justified. However, no one else’s actions are justified and if a titan makes a decision she doesn’t like, she goes straight to they are greedy, egomaniacs.

The 1 star was for her sentence construction and the behind the curtain access to modern day tech wizards, and that was generous.
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