Incoming Resources
- The death of distance, how the communications revolution will change our lives, Frances Cairncross
- Scorched earth, beyond the digital age to a post-capitalist world, Jonathan Crary
- The real cyber war, the political economy of internet freedom, Shawn M. Powers and Michael Jablonski
- Information politics on the Web, Richard Rogers
- Online health and safety, from cyberbullying to internet addiction, Bernadette H. Schell
- The costs of connection, how data is colonizing human life and appropriating it for capitalism, Nick Couldry and Ulises A. Mejias
- The cell phone reader, essays in social transformation, edited by Anandam Kavoori and Noah Arceneaux
- The digital edge, how Black and Latino youth navigate digital inequality, S. Craig Watkins [and five others]
- Truth, lies and trust on the Internet, Monica Whitty and Adam Joinson
- Videocracy, how YouTube is changing the world... with double rainbows, singing foxes, and other trends we can't stop watching, Kevin Allocca
- Throwing rocks at the Google bus, how growth became the enemy of prosperity, Douglas Rushkoff
- Future minds, how the digital age is changing our minds, why this matters, and what we can do about it, Richard Watson
- The death of expertise, the campaign against established knowledge and why it matters, Tom Nichols
- Blown to bits, your life, liberty, and happiness after the digital explosion, Hal Abelson, Ken Ledeen, Harry Lewis
- The cybernetics moment, or why we call our age the information age, Ronald R. Kline
- Appified, culture in the age of apps, Jeremy Wade Morris and Sarah Murray, editors
- Data for the people, how to make our post-privacy economy work for you, Andreas Weigend
- Big tech and democracy, Lisa Idzikowski, book editor
- Divining a digital future, mess and mythology in ubiquitous computing, Paul Dourish and Genevieve Bell
- Your happiness was hacked, why tech is winning the battle to control your brain--and how to fight back, by Vivek Wadhwa and Alex Salkever
- Connected in isolation, digital privilege in unsettled times, Eszter Hargittai
- Digital minimalism, choosing a focused life in a noisy world, Cal Newport
- The anarchist in the library, how the clash between freedom and control is hacking the real world and crashing the system, Siva Vaidhyanathan
- The tyranny of e-mail, the four-thousand-year journey to your inbox, John Freeman
- Digital citizenship, the internet, society, and participation, Karen Mossberger, Caroline J. Tolbert, and Ramona S. McNeal
- The net delusion, the dark side of internet freedom, Evgeny Morozov
- ISpy, surveillance and power in the interactive era, Mark Andrejevic
- A for Anonymous, how a mysterious hacker collective transformed the world, David Kushner ; illustrated by Koren Shadmi
- Magic and loss, the Internet as art, Virginia Heffernan
- Are filter bubbles real?, Axel Bruns
- Info-rich--info-poor, access and exchange in the global information society, Trevor Haywood
- The smartphone society, technology, power, and resistance in the new gilded age, Nicole Aschoff
- You are not a gadget, a manifesto, Jaron Lanier
- How technology is changing human behavior, issues and benefits, C. G. Prado, editor ; foreword by Rossana Pasquino
- We are big data, the future of the information society, Sander Klous, Nart Wielaard
- Algorithmic culture, how big data and artificial intelligence are transforming everyday life, edited by Stefka Hristova, Soonkwan Hong, and Jennifer Daryl Slack
- Silicon snake oil, second thoughts on the information highway, Clifford Stoll
- Fully connected, surviving and thriving in an age of overload, Julia Hobsbawm
- The breakup 2.0, disconnecting over new media, Ilana Gershon
- How to do nothing, resisting the attention economy, Jenny Odell
- Deepfakes, Graham Meikle
- The cluetrain manifesto, the end of business as usual, Rick Levine [and others]
- Smarter than you think, how technology is changing our minds for the better, Clive Thompson
- Does the Internet increase anxiety?, Tamara Thompson, book editor
- Who owns the future?, Jaron Lanier
- Everything is miscellaneous, the power of the new digital disorder, David Weinberger
- The digital difference, media technology and the theory of communication effects, W. Russell Neuman
- This is not propaganda, adventures in the war against reality, Peter Pomerantsev
- 24/7, how cell phones and the Internet change the way we live, work, and play, Jarice Hanson
- Portable communities, the social dynamics of online and mobile connectedness, Mary Chayko