Index Bookstores Magazines My Books Book Reviews Book Bytes About Us Help
Bublos.com
Find Books Faster … Buy Books Cheaper, at Bublos
The Web's Favorite Book Price Comparison Site
Powells
Country:   Max. Timeout:      
  Join Bublos   Sign In   
 

The Future of Reputation: Gossip, Rumor, and Privacy on the Internet

The Future of Reputation: Gossip, Rumor, and Privacy on the Internet at Amazon.com


Share this book with other people •
 Link to This PageBublos Link Del.ico.usDel.icio.us 
 Tell a FriendTell a friend about this book 

ISBN: 0300144229 - The Future of Reputation: Gossip, Rumor, and Privacy on the Internet  
Title:The Future of Reputation: Gossip, Rumor, and Privacy on the Internet
Author:Daniel J. Solove
Publisher:Yale University Press
Type:Book / Paperback
Publication Date:28 October, 2008
ISBN / ISBN-13:0300144229  /  9780300144222
List Price:$16.00
You Save:$5.12
Amazon Price:$10.88

* This book is also available, brand-new, from 3rd-party marketplace sellers at Amazon.com, from $8.95.



Check for the same book at these other US book sites:

• [ Abebooks ]   • [ Alibris ]   • [ Barnes & Noble ]   • [ Half.com ]   • [ Powells ]    … or check UK bookstores
 
Editorial Review / Publisher's Information:

Product Description

Teeming with chatrooms, online discussion groups, and blogs, the Internet offers previously unimagined opportunities for personal expression and communication. But there’s a dark side to the story. A trail of information fragments about us is forever preserved on the Internet, instantly available in a Google search. A permanent chronicle of our private lives—often of dubious reliability and sometimes totally false—will follow us wherever we go, accessible to friends, strangers, dates, employers, neighbors, relatives, and anyone else who cares to look. This engrossing book, brimming with amazing examples of gossip, slander, and rumor on the Internet, explores the profound implications of the online collision between free speech and privacy.

 

Daniel Solove, an authority on information privacy law, offers a fascinating account of how the Internet is transforming gossip, the way we shame others, and our ability to protect our own reputations. Focusing on blogs, Internet communities, cybermobs, and other current trends, he shows that, ironically, the unconstrained flow of information on the Internet may impede opportunities for self-development and freedom. Long-standing notions of privacy need review, the author contends: unless we establish a balance between privacy and free speech, we may discover that the freedom of the Internet makes us less free.

 



Other Items You May Enjoy:
Browse Books From These Related Subjects:
•  All Subjects  ›› Subjects  ›› Business & Investing  ›› General  
•  All Subjects  ›› Subjects  ›› Business & Investing  ›› General AAS  
•  All Subjects  ›› Subjects  ›› Computers & Internet  ›› Business & Culture  ›› Culture  
•  All Subjects  ›› Subjects  ›› Computers & Internet  ›› Business & Culture  ›› Privacy  
•  All Subjects  ›› Subjects  ›› Computers & Internet  ›› Computer Science  ›› General  
•  All Subjects  ›› Subjects  ›› Computers & Internet  ›› Computer Science  ›› General AAS  
•  All Subjects  ›› Subjects  ›› Computers & Internet  ›› General  
•  All Subjects  ›› Subjects  ›› Computers & Internet  ›› General AAS  
•  All Subjects  ›› Subjects  ›› Law  ›› Constitutional Law  ›› Civil Rights  
•  All Subjects  ›› Subjects  ›› Law  ›› General  
•  All Subjects  ›› Subjects  ›› Law  ›› General AAS  
•  All Subjects  ›› Subjects  ›› Nonfiction  ›› Social Sciences  ›› Popular Culture  
•  All Subjects  ›› Subjects  ›› Nonfiction  ›› Social Sciences  ›› Sociology  ›› Culture  
•  All Subjects  ›› Subjects  ›› Professional & Technical  ›› Engineering  ›› Telecommunications  ›› General  
•  All Subjects  ›› Subjects  ›› Professional & Technical  ›› Engineering  ›› Telecommunications  ›› General AAS  
•  All Subjects  ›› Subjects  ›› Professional & Technical  ›› Law  ›› Constitutional Law  ›› Civil Rights  
•  Mass Market  ›› Paperback  
•  Trade  
•  All Subjects  ›› Refinements  ›› Binding (binding)  
•  All Subjects  ›› Refinements  ›› Format (feature_browse-bin)  ›› Printed Books  

Customer Reviews:

 • Engrossing, Important Book About Our Lives And Reputations In The Internet Age
30 October, 2007

Once I started The Future of Reputation, I could not put it down. The book brings alive how online gossip, social networking sites, and blogs increasingly define who we are and how were are perceived in today's Information Age. The stories it tells are, at once, laugh-out-loud funny and terrifying. We see the lives of others distorted by vengeful ex-lovers and mocked by teachers. Online commentators shine light on bad behavior to shame people. Our reputations are out of our control. What I loved about this book is that it asks us to rethink assumptions about how we define ourselves in an age where search engines tell our story to future employers and old high-school classmates. The book helped me appreciate that online shaming plays a new and perhaps important role in shaping behavior but also has serious costs. It offers thoughtful suggestions for what we can do about these problems without sacrificing so much of what is liberating about our online interactions. This is a must read for anyone who is interested in living a full and informed life in the Internet age.

- Reviewed by customer ID: A1ULM3NUTYZ6DZ

 • Timely Subject, And A Great Read For Non-lawyers Too
03 November, 2007

Prof. Solove's latest book is a great follow up to The Digital Person (which I also recommend). What I have enjoyed about his writings is his ability to communicate not only to attorneys like myself, but also to a non-lawyer audience. His focus on Internet privacy impacts all of us, and as anyone who follows the news knows, the explosive growth of Cyberspace places a greater burden on the individual and on the legal community to bolster protections and to guard against invasions of privacy. Solove's work explains the terrain of this new digital era in a way that is informative, engrossing, and relevant. I'm looking forward to his future scholarship in this field.

- Reviewed by customer ID: A3MPW3O8MYKNTI

 • Thought Provoking
08 December, 2007

Solove's book doesn't provide answers, rather it provides situations that help you ask the right questions. As an extra bonus it is extremely well written and an enjoyable read.

- Reviewed by customer ID: A2MR65WXOM13XM

 • The Dangers Of Uncritical Thinking
08 January, 2008

This book addresses an incredibly important topic - and is well written to boot. The danger of reputations ruined by carelessness, or by deliberate ill will, should be understood. In fact, this book should be mandatory for human resources personnel and any search committee that uses the Internet to check on a potential employee. Hopefully Solove will follow up soon with another book. Sites such as Topix, provide a frightening forum for people who are less than ethical. Although Topix provides an alternative format for news, there is no oversight for accuracy or even truth. If Orson Welles had had access to the Internet, perhaps we would all have learned a valuable lesson about questioning and independent thinking. Since Welles is no longer with us, at least we have Daniel Solove to encourage us to question timely issues.

- Reviewed by customer ID: A3IEE5KGUONW2E

 • A Must Read For Bloggers And Other People On Earth.
18 October, 2007

The author, Daniel J. Solove, was kind enough to send me an advance copy of this book; it scored a KnowProSE.com 10/10: "With actual real world examples gleaned from the internet and put in the limelight, the author seems to leave no stone unturned in a quest for answers. Many people will have heard of some of the examples but few will have looked at them in such a circumspect a manner - and even fewer will have done so with a legal background. Most of my time spent reading this book was spent nodding - I knew about 70% of the stories, but then I've been around a while and have been following the Internet closely- more so than most people on the internet. Still, in most instances the author was able to show me at least one new side to it. This seemed a job which makes the Herculean quest of cleaning the stables seem simple - there is no river to divert here, but there is most certainly a lot of manure. Perhaps the book is the start of the river's diversion. Cyber-bullying, Internet Vigilantism, libel, defamation... mountains are easily grown from molehills in cyberspace. The book is very easy to read, it flows and takes on a life of its own. I could not put it down; even knowing some of the stories did not deter my interest. After much contemplation, I have decided to give the book a KnowProSE.com 10/10 score. Only one other book has been given that status, and both books have received this status because they were interesting books that were well written and important, and do one other thing in particular: they will stand the test of time. Daniel J. Solove is rapidly becoming to privacy what Lawrence Lessig is to copyright and the public domain. If you are reading this review, you need to read this book. Who knows? My next blog entry might be about you. Of all the people who need to read this book, I think bloggers are the ones who need to read it the most: being aware of the consequences of what one writes is important in an age when everyone can write, but not everyone considers the consequences to others. Would that we all understood this better."

- Reviewed by customer ID: AFDR1KXPNCEE1


  • International bookstores from Amazon:›› more online bookstores >  
 
    United States United States Canada Amazon Canada France France Germany Germany Japan Japan Spain Spanish books United Kingdom United Kingdom (UK)


Bookstores  |  Magazines  |  My Books  |  Book Bytes  |  Book Reviews  |  Rare Books  |  Help  |  Privacy  |  Top-Ten Book Lists  |  Web Directory  |  Tell-a-Friend  |  Bublos Rewards  |  Set Preferences  |  Contact Us  |  My Bookstores  |  Links to Bublos  |   Link-to-Me  |  About Bublos  |  


 Copyright © 1999 - 2009 Bublos Inc. All rights reserved.