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A review by ehindmon
Nexus by Yuval Noah Harari
informative
reflective
medium-paced
3.25
Perhaps this book wasn’t what I was expecting based on the title, and that’s why I was disappointed a bit by it.
It was informative and insightful. I do feel that I learned something about technology, AI, and how algorithms are manipulating world events.
However, I suppose going into this book I didn’t think it was going to be talking so much about AI, about the dangers of current technology, or about how these technologies can help or harm. I thought this book was going to be more historical in scope, perhaps delving deeper into information exchange throughout history. Although there was some of that history of information that I anticipated, it wasn’t the main focus of this book. This book felt like it provided the history of information dissemination purely as a backdrop for making arguments about AI and current technology.
Overall, it wasn’t a waste of time, per se, but it wasn’t what I was wanting to read about.
It was informative and insightful. I do feel that I learned something about technology, AI, and how algorithms are manipulating world events.
However, I suppose going into this book I didn’t think it was going to be talking so much about AI, about the dangers of current technology, or about how these technologies can help or harm. I thought this book was going to be more historical in scope, perhaps delving deeper into information exchange throughout history. Although there was some of that history of information that I anticipated, it wasn’t the main focus of this book. This book felt like it provided the history of information dissemination purely as a backdrop for making arguments about AI and current technology.
Overall, it wasn’t a waste of time, per se, but it wasn’t what I was wanting to read about.
Minor: Violence, Antisemitism, Colonisation, and Pandemic/Epidemic