Julian Assange: The Internet threatens civilization.

However disappointing, the Wikileaks founder's new book offers a 
fascinating -- and discomfiting -- thesis.

By Adam Morris.

WIKILEAKS FOUNDER JULIAN ASSANGE’S newest book Cypherpunks: Freedom and 
the Future of the Internet is intended as an urgent warning, but it 
seems to have fallen on deaf ears. Despite boasting publicity blurbs 
from a curious medley of public intellectuals — Slavoj Žižek, Naomi 
Wolf, and Oliver Stone among them — Cypherpunks may just as well have 
sunk to the bottom of the sea. Although Assange is one of the most vital 
and polemical activists alive, nobody’s talking about Cypherpunks, and 
nobody seems to have read it. This is a pity, since the book rings a 
justifiably strident alarm bell over the erosion of individual privacy 
rights by an increasingly powerful global surveillance industry.

Though Cypherpunks raises issues of pressing concern, its neglect is not 
all that mysterious. “This book is not a manifesto,” Assange begins. If 
only it were! The pretense of writing one — especially when widely 
rumored to be wanted by the US government and an international cause 
célèbre — would probably have garnered Assange more attention. A good 
old-fashioned manifesto would have been more readable, too: Cypherpunks 
is irritatingly structured as a discussion between Assange and three 
coauthors, the digital activists Jacob Appelbaum, Andy Müller-Maguhn, 
and Jérémie Zimmermann. The intention may have been to emphasize the 
sort of “messy” participatory democracy favored by Occupy, Anonymous, 
and other emergent political forces loosely affiliated with WikiLeaks 
and influenced by anarchist political theory. But the “discussion” 
occasionally slides into pedantic softball-lobs, ego-stroking, and 
phony-sounding debate that will leave the reader wishing for a more 
tightly edited and coherent declaration of the trouble Assange thinks 
we’re in.

more…
http://www.salon.com/2013/04/30/tk_5_partner_15/
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