Cory Doctorow: Hard (Sovereignty) Cases Make Bad (Internet) Law

Let’s start with two obvious facts:

  • The internet is a communications medium, that
  • crosses international borders.
  • That means that every single policy question related to the internet will have:

  • a) A free expression dimension, and
  • b) A national sovereignty dimension.
  • With that out of the way….

    Late last August, Pavel Durov – the billionaire owner of the Telegram app – was arrested by French authorities after he landed his private ...Read More

    Read more

    Cory Doctorow: Marshmallow Longtermism

    There are many ways to cleave the views of the political right from the political left, but none is so science fictional as the right’s confidence in the role of individual self-discipline on one’s life chances. Dip into any political fight about crime and poverty and you’re sure to turn up someone confidently asserting that these social ills are rooted in impatience. Poverty, we’re told, is rooted in an unwillingness ...Read More

    Read more

    Cory Doctorow: Unpersoned

    AT THE END OF MARCH 2024, the romance writer K. Renee discovered that she had been locked out of her Google Docs account, for posting “inappropriate” content in her private files. Renee never got back into her account and never found out what triggered the lockout. She wasn’t alone: as Madeline Ashby recounts in her excellent Wired story on the affair, many romance writers were permanently barred from their own ...Read More

    Read more

    Cory Doctorow: Reckoning

    CORY EFRAM DOCTOROW was born July 17, 1971 in Toronto, Canada. He attended alternative schools and worked at SF specialty store Bakka Books, but dropped out of high school at 17 and briefly moved to Mexico to write. He dropped out of four universities in two years and worked as a CD-ROM programmer, website designer, volunteer in Central America, CIO for a film company and an ad agency, founder of ...Read More

    Read more

    Gary K. Wolfe Reviews The Bezzle by Cory Doctorow

    The Bezzle, Cory Doctorow (Tor 9781250865878, $27.99, 240pp, hc) February 2024.

    There are a handful of SF writers so sharply attuned to the arcane systems that underlie contemporary culture that it sometimes becomes a challenge to figure out what’s SF and what’s not; William Gibson and Kim Stanley Robinson come to mind, as does Cory Doctorow. The Bezzle, Doctorow’s second novel in a new series featuring forensic accountant ...Read More

    Read more

    Cory Doctorow: No One Is the Enshittifier of Their Own Story

    No one was more surprised than I was when the American Dialect Society named ‘‘enshittification’’ – my dirty little coinage to describe how everything on the internet is (suddenly, simultaneously) getting (much) worse – to be its Word of the Year. But though the news was a surprise, it was a very pleasant one.

    My early writings on enshittification focused on its symptoms, the way platforms decay. The progression of ...Read More

    Read more

    Paul Di Filippo Reviews The Bezzle by Cory Doctorow

    The Bezzle, Cory Doctorow (Tor 978-1250865878, $27.99, hc, 240pp) February 2024.

    Cory Doctorow is certainly experiencing a “hot hand” run. That sports phenomenon, where one success impels and invites a subsequent triumph, sometimes in a long streak, can be seen in Doctorow’s two most recent books, which have appeared practically back to back. In November of 2023 came The Lost Cause (reviewed by me for this very publication), which showed ...Read More

    Read more

    Cory Doctorow: Capitalists Hate Capitalism

    In conflict, we find clarity.

    We all hold contradictory views: We love our families, but they drive us crazy. We want more housing in our cities, but we don’t want our property values to decrease with expanded supply. We want better schools, but we recoil from a 0.1% municipal levy to fund them.

    It’s normal to hold contradictory views, but when those views come into conflict, how we act shows ...Read More

    Read more

    Paul Di Filippo Reviews The Lost Cause by Cory Doctorow

    The Lost Cause, Cory Doctorow (Tor 978-1250865939, $29.99, 368pp, hc) November 2022.

    Sometimes I think that Cory Doctorow is the last real optimist and idealist left in science fiction – once a genre characterized by hopeful and future-welcoming readers and authors. True, there are other writers with a generally upbeat worldview, such as Neal Stephenson, Kim Stanley Robinson, and Andy Weir. But none of them manifests the special kind ...Read More

    Read more

    Cory Doctorow: What Kind of Bubble is AI?

    Of course AI is a bubble. It has all the hallmarks of a classic tech bubble. Pick up a rental car at SFO and drive in either direction on the 101 – north to San Francisco, south to Palo Alto – and every single billboard is advertising some kind of AI company. Every business plan has the word “AI” in it, even if the business itself has no AI in ...Read More

    Read more

    Commentary by Cory Doctorow: Don’t Be Evil

    It’s tempting to think of the Great Enshittening – in which all the inter­net services we enjoyed and came to rely upon became suddenly and irreversibly terrible – as the result of moral decay. That is, it’s tempting to think that the people who gave us the old, good internet did so because they were good people, and the people who enshittified it did so because they are shitty people. ...Read More

    Read more

    Commentary by Cory Doctorow: Plausible Sentence Generators

    I was surprised as anyone when I found myself accidentally using a large language model (that is, an “AI” chatbot) to write some prose for me. I was twice as surprised when I found myself impressed by what it wrote.

    Last month, an airline stranded me overnight in New York City when my flight to LA was canceled due to an air traffic control snafu. The airline rep at the ...Read More

    Read more

    Gary K. Wolfe Reviews Red Team Blues by Cory Doctorow

    Red Team Blues, Cory Doctorow (Tor 978-1-250-86584-7, $27.99, 216pp, hc) April 2023.

    The first thing to be said about Cory Doctorow’s Red Team Blues is that it’s SF only in the sense that it deals with razor-edge technologies like cryp­tocurrencies, blockchains, secure enclaves, and other issues that Doctorow clearly understands far better than I do. As with midcareer William Gib­son (and some of Doctorow’s own earlier novels), the line ...Read More

    Read more

    Commentary by Cory Doctorow: SF Doesn‘t Predict, It Contests

    On June 20, 2023, I will be awarded an Honourary Doctor of Laws from York University’s Faculty of Liberal Arts and Professional Studies, in Toronto, Canada. The text below is the speech I will give.

    Goodness me, it is a gigantic honour to be here today, and to be recog­nized in this way. I’m profoundly grateful to the faculty and administration here at York, and to my friends and family ...Read More

    Read more

    Commentary: Cory Doctorow: The Swivel-Eyed Loons Have a Point

    One of the more baffling events of the first quarter of 2023 was the mass protest in Oxford (England, not Mississippi) against the “15-minute city pledge,” a movement to get city councils to strive for cities where each neighborhood is a walkable place, with most amenities (groceries, schools, health care, employers, leisure activities) located within a pleasant 15-minute walk from your door.

    The 15-minute city is an extremely inoffensive and ...Read More

    Read more

    Paul Di Filippo Reviews Red Team Blues by Cory Doctorow

    Red Team Blues, Cory Doctorow (Tor 978-1250865847, hardcover, 224pp, $27.99) April 2023

    I can’t possibly say enough good things about Cory Doctorow’s new novel. It has all the great qualities and features that one expects from a Doctorow tale, but any extra praise it accrues is due to what it does differently from past items in his canon. It shows the writer deliberately moving into fresh territory which—the god ...Read More

    Read more

    Commentary: Cory Doctorow: End to End

    Within the very first year of operation, 1878, Bell’s company learned a sharp lesson about combining teenage boys and telephone switch­boards. Putting teenage boys in charge of the phone system brought swift and consistent disaster. Bell’s chief engineer described them as ‘Wild Indians.’ The boys were openly rude to customers. They talked back to subscribers, saucing off, uttering facetious remarks, and generally giving lip. The rascals took Saint Patrick’s Day ...Read More

    Read more

    Commentary: Cory Doctorow: Social Quitting

    As I type these words, a mass exodus is underway from Twitter and Facebook. After decades of eye-popping growth, these social media sites are contracting at an alarming rate.

    In some ways, this shouldn’t surprise us. All the social networks that preceded the current generation experienced this pattern: SixDegrees, Friendster, MySpace, and Bebo all exploded onto the scene. One day, they were sparsely populated fringe services, the next day, every­one ...Read More

    Read more

    Commentary by Cory Doctorow: The Swerve

    If the bullies at the school gate steal your kid’s lunch money every day, it doesn’t matter how much lunch money you give your kid, he’s not gonna get lunch. But how much lunch money you give your kid does matter – to the bullies. Hell, they might even start a campaign: “The chil­dren of Jack Valenti Elementary School are going hungry! Congress must step in to give those kids ...Read More

    Read more

    Cory Doctorow: Moneylike

    “Five thousand quatloos that the newcomers will have to be destroyed.”

    Quatloos. Credits. Euros. Dollars. Dogecoin.

    Wait, Dogecoin?

    At some point in your life, you’ve probably asked yourself, “What is money?” There’s something existential about pulling a bank-note out of your wallet and asking yourself, “Why does so much of my wak­ing life revolve around getting more of these slips of green paper?” (Outside of the USA, you may ask ...Read More

    Read more

    Cory Doctorow: Six Weeks Is A Long Time

    Greetings from the past.

    I write these words six weeks before you will read them. I used to do this all the time, back in the glory days of print. Hell, I spent most of the ’90s writing a monthly guide to interesting websites, which came out two months after I submitted it.

    I’ve been writing six columns per year for Locus for fourteen years and I have not missed ...Read More

    Read more

    Cory Doctorow: Vertically Challenged

    Science fiction has a longstanding love-hate relationship with the tech tycoon. The literature is full of billionaire inventors, sometimes painted as system-bucking heroes, at other times as megalomanical supervillains.

    From time to time, we even manage to portray one of these people in a way that hews most closely to reality: ordinary mediocrities, no better than you or I, whose success comes down to a combination of luck and a ...Read More

    Read more

    Cory Doctorow: Science Fiction is a Luddite Literature

    From 1811-1816, a secret society styling themselves “the Luddites” smashed textile machinery in the mills of England. Today, we use “Luddite” as a pejorative referring to backwards, anti-technology reactionaries.

    This proves that history really is written by the winners.

    In truth, the Luddites’ cause wasn’t the destruction of technology – no more than the Boston Tea Party’s cause was the elimination of tea, or Al Qaeda’s cause was the end ...Read More

    Read more

    Cory Doctorow: The Unimaginable

    Margaret Thatcher was the least science-fictional world leader in modern history.

    Her motto was “There is no alternative,” a phrase she repeated so often it became an acronym: “TINA.”

    She was referring to capitalism, asserting that there is no conceivable alternative. It was a cheap but remarkably effective rhetorical device, treat­ing a demand as an observation. The true meaning of TINA isn’t “No alternative is possible,” but rather, “Stop trying ...Read More

    Read more

    Cory Doctorow: Breaking In

    When I was a baby writer, I obsessively collected career advice from established writers, reading books and essays and attending panels on ‘‘How I broke in’’ featuring established pros. It’s a testament to the irrational, burning desire to publish that I continued to do this long after it became apparent that there was nothing of contemporary applicability in these discussions.

    I mean, it was entertaining to hear a writer describe ...Read More

    Read more

    Cory Doctorow: Tech Monopolies and the Insufficient Necessity of Interoperability

    I care about monopolies for exactly one reason: self-determination. I don’t care about competition as an end unto itself, or fetishize “choice” for its own sake. What I care about is your ability to live your life in the way you think will suit you, to the greatest extent possible, and taking into account the obvious limits when other people’s needs and wants conflict with you realizing your own desires. ...Read More

    Read more

    Cory Doctorow: Qualia

    Last summer, the pandemic was in its first wave and the nation was in chaos. A lack of federal leadership left each state to figure out how to interpret the science, and many states punted public health decisions to counties or cities or even smaller units, like universities.

    Leaders, left to their own, often winged it, letting wishful thinking trump prudence in the drive to find ways to “reopen safely.” ...Read More

    Read more

    Cory Doctorow: Free Markets

    If you learned your economics from Heinlein novels or the University of Chicago, you probably think that “free market” describes an economic system that is free from government interference – where all consensual transactions between two or more parties are permissible.

    But if you went to the source, Adam Smith’s Wealth of Nations, you’ll have found a very dif­ferent definition of a free market: Smith’s concern wasn’t freedom from ...Read More

    Read more

    Maya C. James and Gary K. Wolfe Review Attack Surface by Cory Doctorow

    Attack Surface, Cory Doctorow (Tor 978-1-250-75753-1, $26.99, 384pp, hc) October 2020.

    Privacy is a luxury in Cory Doctorow’s Attack Surface, a political technothriller that follows the questionable choices of former spy, gov­ernment operative, and traitor, Masha Maximow, as she builds cyberweapons for authoritarian govern­ments, greedy cyber firms, and progressive activists alike. Taking place a few years after the events of Little Brother and Homeland, this standalone novel ...Read More

    Read more

    Cory Doctorow: Neofeudalism and the Digital Manor

    As I write this in mid-November 2020, there’s quite a stir over the new version of Apple’s Mac OS, the operating system that runs on its laptops. For more than a year, Apple has engaged in a covert, global surveillance of its users through its operating system, which automatically sent information about which apps you were running to Apple, and which gave Apple a remote veto over whether that program ...Read More

    Read more

    Cory Doctorow: Past Performance is Not Indicative of Future Results

    In “Full Employment“, my July 2020 column, I wrote, “I am an AI skeptic. I am baffled by anyone who isn’t. I don’t see any path from continuous improvements to the (admittedly impressive) ‘machine learning’ field that leads to a general AI any more than I can see a path from continuous improvements in horse-breeding that leads to an internal combustion engine.”

    Today, I’d like to expand on that. Let’s ...Read More

    Read more