I ended CES by finishing a book. It was Uncanny Valley,eroticism ideas male pleasure a memoir from New Yorkercontributor Anna Wiener, which comes out on Tuesday.
It’s not a polemic, and, despite the many (thinly veiled) references to well-known tech companies, it’s not a dishy tell-all about Silicon Valley.
Instead, it's a measured, personal, and deeply human look at the tech industry. Wiener moves from a low-paying publishing job to a start-up in New York City, and then takes another job at a data analytics company in San Francisco. In the Bay Area, she finds everything you might expect, including hubris, misogyny, and offensively priced condos.
She also encounters some of that famous Silicon Valley utopianism, often from young men on the cusp of becoming very rich.
"In reality, there was nothing superior about those whom I was trying to impress," Wiener wrote. "Most were smart and nice and ambitious, but so were a lot of people. The novelty was burning off; the industry's pervasive idealism was increasingly dubious. Tech, for the most part, wasn't progress. It was just business."
"Tech, for the most part, wasn't progress. It was just business."
The idea that Facebook and other tech companies are like Goldman Sachs, Coca-Cola, or any other corporation is powerful. Tech as a movement is above the fray, a miraculous force for change that can only be ruined by politicians and journalists who are jealous or just don't get it.
Businesses, on the other hand, can be regulated. Their founders can be held accountable. And their workers — however they are defined — can organize.
The book was fresh in my mind when I stepped into the Labor Innovation & Technology Summit at CES, held in a modest conference room at Bally’s in Las Vegas. Serious talks about labor rights are not what I expect from CES. Last year, it was home to a speaker with cup holders and a smart toilet.
At the panel I attended, the crowd was dwarfed by the number of people who, a day earlier, watched Samsung unveil a robot ball named "Ballie."
Still, it was progress. At the end of Uncanny Valley, as the Trump era dawns, mentions of workers' rights and corporate responsibility starts to creep into Silicon Valley conversations. CES, it turns out, couldn't ignore these issues forever.
"We're told technology is inevitable, that we can't fight the future," said Louis Hyman, a Cornell professor and author of Temp: The Real Story of What Happened to Your Salary, Benefits, and Job Security. While tech certainly "disrupted" some business models, in his view, companies in Silicon Valley were simply continuing a long American tradition — screwing workers at the bottom of the corporate hierarchy.
"These transformations happened long before we had smartphones, long before Uber," Hyman said. "It all began in the 1960s and '70s, when corporations discovered they could outsource their workforce in new ways."
In the 21st century, automation and outsourcing has been brutal for blue collar workers. And despite the "perks," like free beer and ping-pong tables, white collar workers are pressured to give their companies more and more of their time and attention, even when its shareholders who take home most of the rewards.
Wiener laments "we had become bureaucrats, punching at our computers, making other people — some kids — unfathomably rich."
It's easy to blame Jeff Bezos and Mark Zuckerberg for this state of affairs. But, again, tech companies are simply capitalizing on incentives and trends that have been driving income inequality for decades. One of Silicon Valley's greatest innovations is rebranding the priorities of the rich as something fresh, even revolutionary.
At one point, Wiener talks to a guest at a party in San Francisco, who gushes about the blog of a libertarian economist. Wiener was not impressed. "Most of his ideas were not new," she wrote, "we had simply, as a culture, moved past them already."
"You have to take it from them."
Now, however, the spell is breaking. Young people are smart; they realize that Facebook and Palantir aren't the places to make positive change in the world.
So how to move forward? Some of the speakers at the CES labor summit called for innovation, in education and how unions organize. For others, it was a matter of pushing tried-and-true methods harder than before.
"Who is going to prosper from technology?" asked D. Taylor, president of UNITE HERE!, a labor union that represents hotel, gaming, and food service workers, among others, during the panel. "It's not going to be workers until we rip it out of the hands of the boss. That might sound old school, but they never give it up. You have to take it from them."
On the CES showroom floor, sunny optimism was still the flavor of the day. I was sold everything from crypto watchfaces to artificial humans as the bright future of civilization.
Tech companies small and large will hold onto the idea that they are exceptional, because it's flattering and profitable. They are not homogenous; neither are the problems they fix and cause, and the solutions to those problems. But it's clear they won't change, at least in any meaningful way, unless they face public pressure. What happened at CES was a start. Uncanny Valleyhelps. We can only hope that the tech industry is listening.
Topics CES
11 easy April Fools' Day pranks, if you need a lil fun to brighten your dayJohn Krasinski's Some Good News Twitter account will brighten your timelineWhat to do when you can't sleepBoring phone game Wordscapes is also a lovely selfTake a break from stressing and watch these puppies explore an aquariumHow to last longer in bedTrish Regan, who called coronavirus an 'impeachment scam,' leaves Fox BusinessHow to last longer in bedPhoebe WallerFormer astronaut more worried about dying in hospital than on a rocketPrime Minister Boris Johnson tests positive for coronavirus'Yellowjackets' Season 2: Who might die in the wilderness?Instagram gets two new types of ads, yay'Quordle' today: See each 'Quordle' answer and hints for March 22Twitter's '10 Macbooks' hacker continues to run amok, scamming on the platformJohn Krasinski's Some Good News Twitter account will brighten your timelineWhatsApp will soon let you chat with WhatsApp on WhatsAppNCAA Tournament live stream: How to watch Xavier vs. Texas in the Sweet 16'Watchmen,' 'Contagion' PSAs tell us how to keep safe from coronavirusPrime Minister Boris Johnson tests positive for coronavirus The biggest typos Donald Trump deleted from Twitter in 2018 (so far) Guy Pearce says Kevin Spacey was 'handsy' while filming 'LA Confidential' Conservatives want 'civility,' but are against political correctness 'Arthur' ends after 25 years but we'll always have the memes Trump's Truth Social: What you need to know A photo of the Trump Boys gets the Twitter joke treatment Who killed Xavier on 'The Afterparty?' An investigation. 'Uncharted' movie surprise: Did you catch that wild cameo? The best memes of 2018 so far GLAAD report finds LGBTQ representation on TV at an all Salesforce employees protest company's NFT plans PlayStation VR2: Sony shares the headset's first pictures How to turn on iOS' dark mode on your iPhone How to use the Instagram Professional Dashboard feature This sendoff from Toys 'R' Us will break your inner child's heart Of course America is celebrating 4th of July with a misspelled hashtag Adorable 7 Seth Rogen just discovered a woman is traveling Russia with a Seth Rogen cardboard cutout Chance the Rapper is engaged, and we're begging for a wedding invite Cop called on black state representative campaigning in her neighborhood has the right response
1.374s , 10195.8515625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【eroticism ideas male pleasure】,Exquisite Information Network