Searches: Selfhood in the Digital Age

Searches: Selfhood in the Digital Age

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  • Create Date:2025-04-16 10:20:22
  • Update Date:2025-09-14
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  • Author:Vauhini Vara
  • ISBN:B0D93JXZH5
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Summary

From the author of The Immortal King Rao, finalist for the Pulitzer Prize, a personal exploration of how technology companies have both fulfilled and exploited the human desire for understanding and connection

A MOST ANTICIPATED The New York Times, EsquireHarper’s Bazaar, Foreign PolicyBustle, Alta, Ms。 Magazine, Cultured, Denizen, The Millions, Lit Hub, Book Riot, and Electric Literature


When it was released to the public in November 2022, ChatGPT awakened the world to a secretive teaching AI-powered machines to write。 Its creators had a sweeping ambition—to build machines that could not only communicate, but could do all kinds of other activities, better than humans ever could。 But was this goal actually achievable? And if reached, would it lead to our liberation or our subjugation?

Vauhini Vara, an award-winning tech journalist and editor, had long been grappling with these questions。 In 2021, she asked a predecessor of ChatGPT to write about her sister’s death, resulting in an essay that was both more moving and more disturbing than she could have imagined。 It quickly went viral。

The experience, revealing both the power and the danger of corporate-owned technologies, forced Vara to interrogate how these technologies have influenced her understanding of her self and the world around her, from discovering online chat rooms as a preteen, to using social media as the Wall Street Journal’s first Facebook reporter, to asking ChatGPT for writing advice—while compelling her to add to the trove of human-created material exploited for corporations’ financial gain。 Interspersed throughout this investigation are her own Google searches, Amazon reviews, and the other raw material of internet life—including the viral AI experiment that started it all。 Searches illuminates how technological capitalism is both shaping and exploiting human existence, while proposing that by harnessing the collective creativity that makes humans unique, we might imagine a freer, more empowered relationship with our machines and, ultimately, with one another。

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Reviews

Valerie

Remarkable, a book that gave me new eyes

mari

i found this book interesting though some elements are much stronger than others。overall, though, it gives interesting context to the time and place we find ourselves with technology, ai, the rise of the tech billionaires, and the power they wield。

Lydia Wallace

I could relate to Vara in this pull between knowing all the things that entities like Meta, Amazon, and Google due to surveil us and yet not being able to stop using their services due to the convenience and reliance we’ve developed with them。 Highly recommend。

John West

There's a genre of book that I, glibly, call "the internet is weird, huh?" I've had to read a lot of books in this genre, and SEARCHES is the best entry I've ever read—so good, in fact, that it breaks the genre, transcends it。 A true five-star book。 There's a genre of book that I, glibly, call "the internet is weird, huh?" I've had to read a lot of books in this genre, and SEARCHES is the best entry I've ever read—so good, in fact, that it breaks the genre, transcends it。 A true five-star book。 。。。more

Arcanum

Thank you to the giveaway organisers。 I will update this once I receive the book。

Ben

Thanks to NetGalley and Pantheon for the ARC of this title。This is a 3。5 rounded up to 4。 When the essays in this book nail it, they nail。 it。 Moving, thoughtful, doing great work in thinking about what the current round of LLM can do and is useful for。I'm fine with the overall bridging sections with a Chat GPT (or ChatGPT-alike) reviews the last few chapters as a framing mechanism, but so many of the essays feel like good conceptual _ideas_ for essays set up in the chapter immediately preceding Thanks to NetGalley and Pantheon for the ARC of this title。This is a 3。5 rounded up to 4。 When the essays in this book nail it, they nail。 it。 Moving, thoughtful, doing great work in thinking about what the current round of LLM can do and is useful for。I'm fine with the overall bridging sections with a Chat GPT (or ChatGPT-alike) reviews the last few chapters as a framing mechanism, but so many of the essays feel like good conceptual _ideas_ for essays set up in the chapter immediately preceding them that, once executed, are nowhere near as fun to engage with as a reader vs。 as a thought experiment。"I decided if I was going to use Amazon less, I'd need to write a review for any product I purchased。"Cool。[an essay consisting of the product reviews]Meh。An essay engaging with AI image generation's biases around women and people of color? Great!A story that uses AI image generation to showcase this in the form of a fictional investor pitch that shows how those tools illustrate some claims vs。 others when race/gender in included in the prompt? interesting as a thought experiment as a potential illustration, deeply frustrating to read, especially thinking about the resources needed to generate (and possible re-generate) the images。The essays that were the clear driver for this book shine, I just wish the rest wasn't so reliant on engaging with LLMs to do the work。 。。。more

Brown Girl Bookshelf

“Searches” is unlike anything I’ve read before: a genre-defying mix of memoir, investigative reporting, and anthropology。 Vauhini Vara, whose Pulitzer-nominated novel “The Immortal King Rao” explored a dystopian world ruled by a tech corporation, has long been fascinated by the intersection of power, technology, and humanity。 Her latest work is a chronology of the tech industry, from AOL to Generative AI, all while weaving in a deeply personal story of grief。 Where most AI discourse is either do “Searches” is unlike anything I’ve read before: a genre-defying mix of memoir, investigative reporting, and anthropology。 Vauhini Vara, whose Pulitzer-nominated novel “The Immortal King Rao” explored a dystopian world ruled by a tech corporation, has long been fascinated by the intersection of power, technology, and humanity。 Her latest work is a chronology of the tech industry, from AOL to Generative AI, all while weaving in a deeply personal story of grief。 Where most AI discourse is either doomsday panic or blind optimism, Vara offers a rare balm: clarity。 This book neither fears nor worships technology—it simply asks readers to pay attention。 Her writing is what one would expect from a master journalist turned award-winning novelist: sharp, meticulously researched, wry, and deeply perceptive。 She distills nuance from complex systems; how Amazon shapes not just what we buy, but what gets produced。 Or how popular platforms mirror innate sources of power: Amazon for economic capital, Google for cultural capital, Facebook for social capital。 She presents these insights without prescription, inviting us to reflect rather than react against the system without forethought。 Her personal anecdotes are admirably candid: a chapter on how Google evolved from a founding motto of “don’t be evil,” and the ways it has satisfied or betrayed this belief, followed by pages of her own unfiltered Google searches, even the embarrassing ones。 She traces the gentrification of her hometown, Seattle, punctuated by the forces shaping her own home: her parents tumultuous marriage and a sister battling cancer。 After a tense ethical debate with a friend, she commits to justify her Amazon purchases with lengthy reviews, even sharing these ramblings in a chapter that brilliantly blends narrative device with a subtle critique of consumerism。 ChatGPT itself interrupts the book with feedback, turning the act of writing into a conversation between human and machine。 These aren’t gimmicks, though they are entertaining; they are choices to illustrate how technology is intertwined with our existence。 Vara doesn’t deny AI’s risks, but she resists oversimplifications。 She includes in secondary academic research, and first-person interviews, including one with Sam Altman back when OpenAI was a small nonprofit built by optimistic engineers, which deepen her analysis of technology and ethics。 As someone who grew up in Silicon Valley—where Apple was founded, where my schools received donated MacBooks, where I watched the first iPhone debut—I found myself reckoning with my own place in this history。 I felt awe at the outsized influence a small, privileged bubble, one I was proximally a part of, has had in shaping the world; nostalgia, remembering my illicit exploration of an AOL chat room or the first Instagram photo I ever posted—a hazily filtered shot of my friend eating a cookie, captioned extremely literally—before the platform morphed into influencers, engagement metrics, and curated realities。 And then, most unexpectedly, moments that knocked the wind out of me。 The rawness of grief—a force that, despite technology’s relentless march forward, remains immutable and inescapable。 Amid the loud sea of AI opinions online, Vara’s voice challenges you to consider what, in this next age of artificial intelligence, demands our protection and defines humanity。 。。。more

Michael Smith

Wow! This is an immensely ambitious book, one that’ll likely find its way onto awards lists later this year。 A deeply personal and introspective journey through a life interwined with tech, and a masterclass in the blurry ethics of AI and artistry。 Read it。

Ula Tardigrade

Deeply personal, lyrical and thought-provoking essays from one of the most original voices on new technologies。 She skilfully blends recollections from the early days of the Internet with the most pressing questions about our privacy and identity。 Fresh and surprising。Thanks to the publisher, Pantheon, and NetGalley for an advanced copy of this book。

Royal

Most Seattlites, whether or not they work in Big Tech, have a general idea of how tech monoliths like Amazon, Microsoft, etc have transformed the city in the past few decades。 Searches provide in-depth background, critical analysis and personal experience on the impact of modern tech advances, as author and tech journalist Vauhini Vara illustrates her experience growing up during the tech boom。 The book starts with reminding us that these companies used to be lauded for their progressive values, Most Seattlites, whether or not they work in Big Tech, have a general idea of how tech monoliths like Amazon, Microsoft, etc have transformed the city in the past few decades。 Searches provide in-depth background, critical analysis and personal experience on the impact of modern tech advances, as author and tech journalist Vauhini Vara illustrates her experience growing up during the tech boom。 The book starts with reminding us that these companies used to be lauded for their progressive values, innovative ideas, and even philanthropy (i。e。, Mackenzie Scott)。 I also didn’t know about Paul Allen (Microsoft co-founder) saving the Seahawks from having to relocate to LA, so that was a neat piece of local history。I enjoyed the conversational writing style, and the book dives deeply into the origins of the internet and social media to the situation we have today, leaning into the motives of key players like Zuckerberg, Musk, Pichai, Altman, etc。 Vara actually starts off describing her first experiences with chat rooms and AOL and moves seamlessly into investigative reporting on the lawsuits and incursions wrought by social media and tech giants, even divulging little known facts, like Zuckerberg naming his kids after Roman emperors, which is simultaneously appalling and typical at the same time。 Each chapter alternates between Vara’s voice and some feature of tech。 For instance, when Vara writes about Google, the next chapter lists a bunch of Google searches。 When she writes about Amazon and how her friend abstains from shopping on Amazon, the next chapter is filled with her Amazon reviews。 Each chapter is also fed into ChatGPT to form a mini summary/analysis at the end。 The AI-based chapters were kind of a chore to read, a stark contrast to the sheer brilliance and insight of the author’s original writing。 I do appreciate the author’s creativity and experimental take on this stylistic choice; however, it would’ve been more effective if there were less content produced by ChatGPT, maybe or 2 chapters would’ve sufficedSpecial thanks to Knopf, Pantheon, Vintage, and Anchor and NetGalley for providing an eARC in exchange for an honest, independent review。 。。。more

Hollie

An interesting exploration of technologies and capitalism in our lives both positively and negatively。 I personally do not use AI generative applications like Chat GPT but found it interesting to see how these applications built by scrubbing the works of others would interpret works written about them and their founders。 I could relate to Vara in this pull between knowing all the things that entities like Meta, Amazon, and Google due to surveil us and yet not being able to stop using their servi An interesting exploration of technologies and capitalism in our lives both positively and negatively。 I personally do not use AI generative applications like Chat GPT but found it interesting to see how these applications built by scrubbing the works of others would interpret works written about them and their founders。 I could relate to Vara in this pull between knowing all the things that entities like Meta, Amazon, and Google due to surveil us and yet not being able to stop using their services due to the convenience and reliance we’ve developed with them。 Ultimately I found the chapter Ghosts to be the most illuminating surrounding the limitations of AI。 It can try to replicate the way humans talk and sound but it ultimately will always add in information that isn’t true and feels unauthentic to the piece。 This will be a book that I think about often as I continue to explore my own use with technology in our capitalistic society。 。。。more

Victoria Klein

Thanks to NetGalley and Pantheon for this advance readers copy, in exchange for an honest review。 Searches is the author’s meditation on her lived experience and observations about the rise of artificial intelligence, with commentary starting at even the rise of the internet and its availability for widespread use。 I appreciated the author’s vulnerability and personal commentary throughout the book; I thought that the different structure she used throughout was certainly unique although at times Thanks to NetGalley and Pantheon for this advance readers copy, in exchange for an honest review。 Searches is the author’s meditation on her lived experience and observations about the rise of artificial intelligence, with commentary starting at even the rise of the internet and its availability for widespread use。 I appreciated the author’s vulnerability and personal commentary throughout the book; I thought that the different structure she used throughout was certainly unique although at times, a little much to keep up with。 I did particularly appreciate the interactions with AI critiquing the book, as I thought this was pretty clever and interesting to think about, given her points in this book。 I don’t know if I was necessarily the best audience for this, as I struggled to maintain interest throughout。 However, I would definitely recommend this book to anyone interested in this advance of AI and its personal impacts on the human experience。 。。。more

John Caleb Grenn

if this wins the National book award for nonfiction you all have to say that I called it here first on March 20thReview from @jcgrenn_reads on Instagram:SEARCHESVauhini VaraThank you @pantheonbooks — out 4/8A smart, complicated, sweeping work studying how tech and AI function as surveillance capitalism in service of the market, but also a study in how artificial intelligence is relatable, interesting, and probably inescapable。 Searches stays curious about AI and tech while it criticizes Meta, Go if this wins the National book award for nonfiction you all have to say that I called it here first on March 20thReview from @jcgrenn_reads on Instagram:SEARCHESVauhini VaraThank you @pantheonbooks — out 4/8A smart, complicated, sweeping work studying how tech and AI function as surveillance capitalism in service of the market, but also a study in how artificial intelligence is relatable, interesting, and probably inescapable。 Searches stays curious about AI and tech while it criticizes Meta, Google, Apple, Amazon, OpenAI, X and the rest all in balanced and thoughtful essay。 Vara puts herself in the ring as many of these guys were her contemporaries at the beginnings of the tech boom, and writes with grace and humor。In using ChatGPT to give feedback on her manuscript as she writes (and publishing what it has to say) Vara actively implicates herself in humanity’s allowing of the double edged sword that is technology, specifically AI。 Her book comes into our hands and ears at such cost—the paper, the ink, the labor, (the water!) All the resources that create this book are ones we use daily too—Your reading of it comes at that expense as well。 In a world where bookish people love to offer blanket critique and boycott of “AI” it seems many of us also have no problem using the Meta platform on our Apple products day in and day out。 The book is also interesting in another layer—it allows for AI to just make no sense。 An unreliable narrator of sorts, the “feedback” sections often relay some nonsense among other parts that are honestly intensely profound。 The only thing scary about that is that WE THE PPL will continue to believe what we read without regard to source as we always have。 In conclusion, It’s honestly refreshing to have such a “book person” be so on the pulse of all this, and to communicate it to us so clearly。 Someone able to speak straight to the heart of so much we worry about with such beauty creativity and joy—that’s what we need in order to make sense and ensure equity as AI continues to creep into every facet of our lives, whether we want it or not。A brilliant piece of journalism, an honest emotional memoir, and a lovely work of art all in one among other things—If Searches wins Vara a National book award longlisting and/or another Pulitzer nod, you heard it here first。 。。。more

Liv Gwilliam

An interdisciplinary collection of essays and digital ephemera, Searches is ambitious in its scope and succeeds at delivering a thoughtful meditation on the ways in which technology captures, forms, and projects identity。 Journalist and millenial, Vauhini Vara, situates herself within the technological advances of the 21st century, tracing the rise of each of the big tech giants, Google, Amazon, X, Meta, and OpenAI and reflecting on her interactions (past and present) with their products。 Interw An interdisciplinary collection of essays and digital ephemera, Searches is ambitious in its scope and succeeds at delivering a thoughtful meditation on the ways in which technology captures, forms, and projects identity。 Journalist and millenial, Vauhini Vara, situates herself within the technological advances of the 21st century, tracing the rise of each of the big tech giants, Google, Amazon, X, Meta, and OpenAI and reflecting on her interactions (past and present) with their products。 Interwoven into and in between the essays are digital curiosa: Google searches, X interests, Amazon Prime purchases, Google translations, AI images and ChatGPT。 Vara lets the reader consider what is on the page in these computer-generated interludes, asking us if these digital tokens capture or dilute the reality they represent。 If you are reading this book to find clear answers to the philosophical questions Vara poses, you may leave this book feeling unfulfilled。 Building on her popular previously published essay Ghosts - which was interpreted by many as a piece in support of AI - Searches allows Vara to set the record straight, clarifying her far more nuanced perspective, but leaving more questions than she answers。 This book should be top of the list and recommended to anyone feeling vertigo from their digital consumption, as Vara’s reflections invite readers to take the experiment forward and situate themselves within their own technologies。 The highest compliment I could pay to Vara is that Searches shares moments of similarities with Annie Ernaux’s The Years; at its strongest, it is a collective history of the social influence of big tech refracted through the lens of one individual’s life and the digital artifacts that represent it。 。。。more

Louise

Thanks to Pantheon and Netgalley for this advanced copy!Searches is a meditation on technology, our sense of self, what we put out into this world, and what we are getting back from it。 I sometimes struggle with books that have unique and often changing structures, but Searches pulled me in and I appreciated how each chapter wasn't forced to conform to a style, but was set up to best illustrate the point the author was making。 This type of style change can feel gimmicky in the wrong hands, but V Thanks to Pantheon and Netgalley for this advanced copy!Searches is a meditation on technology, our sense of self, what we put out into this world, and what we are getting back from it。 I sometimes struggle with books that have unique and often changing structures, but Searches pulled me in and I appreciated how each chapter wasn't forced to conform to a style, but was set up to best illustrate the point the author was making。 This type of style change can feel gimmicky in the wrong hands, but Vara uses it well and it adds to the reading experience, as well as the theme。 On top of that, I don't know that I needed to read another book or article about tech and our lives, but by centering much of this book around Vara's life, and the loss of her sister, Vara humanizes this conversation in a way so few do。 。。。more

izzy

This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers。 To view it, click here。 Thank you to Netgalley and the publisher for providing me with an ARC of Searches! Honestly, by the time I got to the end, I had a lot of conflicting opinions about the text。 Ultimately, in my opinion, I felt that it was trying to be too many things at once。 Part critical analysis, part memoir, part abstract theorizing and rumination。 Certain aspects of it worked for me, while others did not。 I particularly did not enjoy the author’s handwringing about her use of Amazon and generative AI。 The mo Thank you to Netgalley and the publisher for providing me with an ARC of Searches! Honestly, by the time I got to the end, I had a lot of conflicting opinions about the text。 Ultimately, in my opinion, I felt that it was trying to be too many things at once。 Part critical analysis, part memoir, part abstract theorizing and rumination。 Certain aspects of it worked for me, while others did not。 I particularly did not enjoy the author’s handwringing about her use of Amazon and generative AI。 The moral grandstanding that we all have to deal with these days, whether from politicians or from friends and family, is already exhausting, and having to read an entire chapter’s worth of Amazon reviews doesn’t make me gain any sympathy for the author。 My own qualms aside, though, the use of AI as a source of external commentary on the text of the novel was something I found interesting。 The juxtaposition of the author’s writing—often complex and interwoven with thought and emotion in a way AI can hardly replicate, in my opinion—and the AI’s formulaic, repetitive responses was stark, and gave me a lot of food for thought on the ways in which we have been letting AI permeate our lives。 I also liked Vara’s interrogation and challenging of ChatGPT throughout the text, particularly as it pertained to tone, portrayals of figures like Sam Altman, and strategies to ingratiate itself with the user。 While not a particularly groundbreaking reflection on AI and the role of technology in our lives, Searches was overall an interesting read。 。。。more

Annaliese

This book does what it’s trying to do well and creatively。 Though opposed to AI, I thought the interspersing of AI-generated feedback between chapters was innovative。 It showed the AI’s storytelling is inferior to Vara’s lived experience。 A super interesting read but one I worry will lose relevance as more generative models come into being。 Thank you for NetGalley and Pantheon for the ARC。

Jada Morris

4。5 ⭐️When I initially read the description, I thought this was going to be hyper fixated on open AI and ChatGPT。 But I enjoyed reading both her perspective and the AI from her chapters。 Some parts of the reading are hard to get through and a little dull, but I feel as if that was her point。 I do think that this is an important conversation to have because she points out a lot of originality and personal touches that are lost through the advancement of AI。 Overall, I really enjoyed reading this 4。5 ⭐️When I initially read the description, I thought this was going to be hyper fixated on open AI and ChatGPT。 But I enjoyed reading both her perspective and the AI from her chapters。 Some parts of the reading are hard to get through and a little dull, but I feel as if that was her point。 I do think that this is an important conversation to have because she points out a lot of originality and personal touches that are lost through the advancement of AI。 Overall, I really enjoyed reading this book。 I was already interested in topics like this, but I really appreciate the perspective of this author。Thank you NetGalley for sending me this E-ARC for review!! 。。。more

Angie

Vara is a former journalist whose beats covered the tech industry。 She also wrote a viral essay, "Ghosts", in which she tried to write about her older sister, who died of cancer, with the help of an early version of ChatGPT。 In that piece, also included here, she begins writing several different essays about her grief, having AI finish them。 With each version, more and more of the AI text is replaced with her own words。 The piece was also adapted for a This American Life episode。 I read both Var Vara is a former journalist whose beats covered the tech industry。 She also wrote a viral essay, "Ghosts", in which she tried to write about her older sister, who died of cancer, with the help of an early version of ChatGPT。 In that piece, also included here, she begins writing several different essays about her grief, having AI finish them。 With each version, more and more of the AI text is replaced with her own words。 The piece was also adapted for a This American Life episode。 I read both Vara's short story collection and the essay "Ghosts", so was intrigued to see an entire essay collection interrogating our relationship with modern technology (Facebook, Amazon, Twitter, Google, AI, etc。)Through various chapters, Vara weaves in personal history along with the history of a various technology, while also incorporating her own relationship with each。 So we have the juxtaposition of how the city of Seattle, where she lived as a teen, is shaped by the rise of various tech companies like Microsoft and Amazon, while also getting background on how each of those technologies became so ubiquitous in our lives。 An essay on AI and creativity includes an imaginary pitch that she has varous AI programs provide the art for, which only provides evidence for some of the downsides of AI art creation, like the biases and stereotypes baked in。 Interspersed with each essay, we get various documents from Vara's own uses of each technology: her Amazon order history, her Google search history, the interests Twitter has assigned to her (in a chapter called "Elon Musk, Empire", a litte too on-the-nose right now, shudder)。 She also feeds each of her essays into ChatGPT and has it summarize and respond to each essay。 These ChatGPT responses are sometimes innaccurate and usually excessively optimistic about each technology (Acknowledge positive contributions! is one of Chat's frequent responses)。 While interesting, these sections often felt a little repetitive。Vara shares how much we are potentially giving up, personally and societally, by our dependence on such technologies (and particularly the monopolistic companies and individuals behind them) and how we sacrifice privacy, autonomy, and discovery for convenience and progress。 But she does so while also sharing how she still continues to use each, despite knowing more than most about the potential drawbacks。 。。。more

ashes ➷

read a bit of the latter (chatgpt-focused) sections and i'm so torn。 i want this to be big and for people to get more reasonable (as i think vara is) about chatgpt and its use as an art aid, but i am also so fucking pissed off at how hardliners forget their hardline stance and don't even notice themselves becoming more reasonable, let alone apologizing for deriding any and all uses of chatgpt/generative ai at large for/in art before they saw it used by a ~high literary writer~。 oh well i suppose read a bit of the latter (chatgpt-focused) sections and i'm so torn。 i want this to be big and for people to get more reasonable (as i think vara is) about chatgpt and its use as an art aid, but i am also so fucking pissed off at how hardliners forget their hardline stance and don't even notice themselves becoming more reasonable, let alone apologizing for deriding any and all uses of chatgpt/generative ai at large for/in art before they saw it used by a ~high literary writer~。 oh well i suppose i shall get less skrunkly once i read the whole book。。。 we hope!。。。 tho i am not cheered to see it is mostly NOT about the thing i am most interested in x_X。 。。。more

Margaret Heller

Reviewed for Library Journal。

Nancy

This deeply personal consideration of the impact of the digital age and Artificial Intelligence on the author’s life is candid and surprising, incorporating unique narratives。 A chapter on the author’s Goggle searches and dialogues with ChatGPT about her manuscript are included, and AI created ‘photographs’, and shudderingly bad AI text。I can see us turning reflexively to AI assistants for lots of aspects of daily life。 We can’t stop ourselves, any more than we were able to in the past。” from Se This deeply personal consideration of the impact of the digital age and Artificial Intelligence on the author’s life is candid and surprising, incorporating unique narratives。 A chapter on the author’s Goggle searches and dialogues with ChatGPT about her manuscript are included, and AI created ‘photographs’, and shudderingly bad AI text。I can see us turning reflexively to AI assistants for lots of aspects of daily life。 We can’t stop ourselves, any more than we were able to in the past。” from Searches by Vauhini VaraTech journalist Vara admits she can’t resist Digital Age technology, even knowing the drawbacks。If our social media presence reflects our offline identities only the way that a fun-house mirror does, who is it, exactly, that advertisers are reaching, when social media companies promise to target ads to us based on that presence? from Searches by Vauhini VaraI get frustrated by the stupidity I encounter daily, such as the Facebook ads on my Literate Quilter page on which I daily get a dozen ads for runners, especially Black runners, when I have two bad knees。 Or how Goggle Photos identifies relatives incorrectly, often way off base, so I am continuingly correcting them。I search online to fact check when writing, or making sure I am using the correct word。 But would I used ChatGPT to write on days I am stymied about what to say? Like, for this review on a book so obviously over-my-head? Would I purchase an AI written novel? I mean, Jane Austen only wrote so many and if I am longing to read one more, would I take a chance on such a book?I can’t imagine it。 My husband watches a lot of YouTube educational videos because he has pledged to overcome his addiction to the news and I can immediately tell which have real people narrating。 When the voice talks about “fts” instead of “feet” you know something is off。Today I read in the newspaper that the Tesla Cybertruck bomber used ChatGPT to plan the blast。 Technology, once in the world, is hard to control。Vara questions “is it possible to invent a technology of communication ourselves that can overcome what separates and hierarchizes us? Or would any technology only reinscribe the separations and hierarchies that already exist? In the end, perhaps it is better to do what is more difficult: to keep trying to improve our communication using the free tool we already have, which is language。 Perhaps what makes life easier is not always better。”A fascinating book on complex issues。Thanks to the publisher for a free book。 。。。more

Britt

Overall I enjoyed this book。 I think the author takes an introspective look on how digital technologies have impacted her life and personal identity while exploring the ways she interacts with the world。 The reflection takes place from 2019-2024 and Vara provides her musings on the development of various modern technologies, namely Google, Meta, and Open AI。 She also tussles with what role she should play as the previously named corporations seek to use their platforms to connect and possibly do Overall I enjoyed this book。 I think the author takes an introspective look on how digital technologies have impacted her life and personal identity while exploring the ways she interacts with the world。 The reflection takes place from 2019-2024 and Vara provides her musings on the development of various modern technologies, namely Google, Meta, and Open AI。 She also tussles with what role she should play as the previously named corporations seek to use their platforms to connect and possibly dominate the entire world。 Will she be a conscious consumer, critic, or conspirator? There is a memoir like quality to the book as she spends a considerable amount of time interrogating the contributions she is presently making and reflecting on the decisions she has made in the past as she came of age online。 I think my least favorite part of the book were the conversations with ChatGPT。 There are so many AI generated articles and think pieces being passed around online that it detracted from the conversation I felt like I was having with her in my position a reader。 It felt like I was walking in on a conversation that I wasn't invited to。 I think I have had my fill of ChatGPT's sterile and empty writing style, but to Vara's credit she discusses this at length in a chapter。 Overall a solid book that I enjoyed and feels in conversations with Race After Technology by Ruha Benjamin and Filterworld by Kyle Chayka。 。。。more

E。R。 Burgess

This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers。 To view it, click here。 An exceptional and experimental book that uses AI tools to compose a sometimes slow but more frequently brilliant narrative about what it’s like to live in the Age of AI as a writer。 A memoir and a meditation on technology, Vara stumbles a couple of times with concepts that don’t take off (the Spanish chapter), but her detailed conversations with ChatGPT, her observations about her own life in technology, and her discussion of her sister’s tragic passing resonates strongly。 I haven’t read the pr An exceptional and experimental book that uses AI tools to compose a sometimes slow but more frequently brilliant narrative about what it’s like to live in the Age of AI as a writer。 A memoir and a meditation on technology, Vara stumbles a couple of times with concepts that don’t take off (the Spanish chapter), but her detailed conversations with ChatGPT, her observations about her own life in technology, and her discussion of her sister’s tragic passing resonates strongly。 I haven’t read the previous collection she references frequently, Ghosts, so I’m not sure if a lot of this ground was covered there, but Searches is an important book that helps us parse being a creative person at a time when creative work is being reimagined with AI technologies。 Kudos to her for the Processes section, which will probably find its way into more books in the days ahead。 。。。more

Vauhini

Whoa this book is so good omg

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