
Bartlett's Wall Street Journal bestseller exposes how big tech is dismantling democracy's foundations. Praised as "superb" by experts, this 2019 Transmission Prize winner asks: Can we reclaim our digital future before algorithms replace active citizenship? "There is still time - just."
Jamie Bartlett, British author of The People vs Tech and award-winning technology commentator, combines investigative journalism with incisive analysis of digital society’s most pressing challenges.
A former director of Demos’ Centre for the Analysis of Social Media, Bartlett built his reputation exploring how technology reshapes politics, security, and human behavior—themes central to his 2019 Transmission Prize-winning book that warns how digital platforms endanger democratic institutions.
His bestselling The Dark Net (2014) pioneered public understanding of hidden online subcultures, while Radicals Chasing Utopia (2017) documented fringe political movements. Bartlett’s BBC podcast The Missing Cryptoqueen—downloaded over 3.5 million times—exposed history’s largest cryptocurrency scam and is being adapted for television.
Through his newsletter How to Survive the Internet and viral TED Talk (5 million views), he continues shaping global conversations about tech ethics. Translated into 15 languages, his works remain essential reading for understanding digital age risks.
The People Vs Tech examines how digital technologies—from social media algorithms to big data—threaten democracy by eroding six key pillars: active citizenship, shared narratives, free elections, equality, civic institutions, and national sovereignty. Bartlett argues that unchecked tech power enables surveillance, polarization, and manipulation, urging reforms like data ownership rights and ethical AI to reclaim democratic control.
This book is essential for policymakers, tech professionals, and citizens concerned about digital privacy, election integrity, and corporate power. It offers insights for those interested in cybersecurity, political activism, or the societal impacts of AI, with actionable ideas for safeguarding democracy.
Yes—it combines rigorous analysis of tech’s democratic risks with solutions like breaking up monopolies and rethinking digital citizenship. Winner of the 2019 Transmission Prize, it’s praised for its clarity on complex issues like Cambridge Analytica’s election interference and predictive policing biases.
Key concepts include:
Bartlett details how Cambridge Analytica used Facebook data to manipulate voters in the 2016 US election, illustrating how unchecked tech enables “psychographic targeting” that undermines free will. This case study highlights the urgent need for data privacy laws.
Some argue Bartlett emphasizes dystopian scenarios over grassroots resistance, like open-source tech or decentralized platforms. Critics note it focuses more on diagnosing problems than detailing bipartisan policy solutions.
While The Dark Net explores hidden online subcultures, The People Vs Tech focuses on systemic threats from mainstream tech. Both critique digital autonomy vs. control but target different audiences—niche communities versus policymakers.
Yes: Bartlett proposes banning microtargeted political ads, creating data cooperatives, and enforcing antitrust laws against Big Tech. He advocates for “algorithmic audits” to ensure AI systems align with public interest.
With AI dominating global discourse, the book’s warnings about autonomous weapons, deepfakes, and biometric surveillance remain urgent. Its framework for balancing innovation and ethics guides current debates on ChatGPT regulation and Meta’s metaverse.
His investigative rigor—seen in BBC’s The Missing Cryptoqueen podcast—shapes the book’s reliance on case studies like election hacking and predictive policing. This approach makes abstract tech debates tangible and relatable.
Platforms like Facebook prioritize engagement over truth, incentivizing outrage and conspiracy theories. Bartlett links this to declining trust in media and rising authoritarianism, urging redesigns that prioritize factual discourse.
Siente el libro a través de la voz del autor
Convierte el conocimiento en ideas atractivas y llenas de ejemplos
Captura ideas clave en un instante para un aprendizaje rápido
Disfruta el libro de una manera divertida y atractiva
We're living in an advertising panopticon.
The ultimate goal is to understand users better than they understand themselves.
This constant visibility creates self-censorship and conformity.
Digital technology's perfect memory prevents the forgetting necessary for personal development.
The internet provides an unlimited supply of legitimate grievances.
Desglosa las ideas clave de People vs Tech en puntos fáciles de entender para comprender cómo los equipos innovadores crean, colaboran y crecen.
Destila People vs Tech en pistas de memoria rápidas que resaltan los principios clave de franqueza, trabajo en equipo y resiliencia creativa.

Experimenta People vs Tech a través de narraciones vívidas que convierten las lecciones de innovación en momentos que recordarás y aplicarás.
Pregunta lo que quieras, elige la voz y co-crea ideas que realmente resuenen contigo.

Creado por exalumnos de la Universidad de Columbia en San Francisco
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Creado por exalumnos de la Universidad de Columbia en San Francisco

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Every twelve minutes. That's how often the average person checks their phone-not because we're waiting for something urgent, but because we've been engineered to crave it. We live in an age where democracy itself is under siege, not by tanks or tyrants, but by the very devices we can't put down. The threat isn't coming from outside our borders; it's nestled in our pockets, learning our deepest fears and desires with every swipe and click. What happens when the tools designed to connect us become weapons that divide us, when the platforms promising freedom deliver surveillance, and when the technologies meant to empower citizens instead undermine the very foundations of self-governance? We're all living inside a digital panopticon-Jeremy Bentham's prison design reimagined for the smartphone era. But this time, the guards are algorithms, and the prisoners volunteered. This isn't paranoia; it's business strategy refined over a century, and understanding how we got here is the first step toward breaking free.