RECOMMENDED. . . [ Weiss] explores the many ills that accompany modern internet-mediated society, from data loss to trolling to surveillance capitalism. Weiss presents these as what he calls "information pathologies," and in discussing them he compares the visible and underlying issues in information to the symptoms and root causes of a disease. . . . Weiss's overview of all these problems would be useful for readers looking for an entry point into this community of thought. * Choice Reviews * The Dark Side of Our Digital World covers a challenge that is not just timely, but will be with us for the rest of our lives. In an easy to read, but informative manner, Weiss masterfully lays out how your Internet experience, and how you act and believe, can be shaped from afar. If knowing is half the battle, this is a valuable resource to fighting back. -- P.W. Singer, author of Cybersecurity and Cyberwar, Ghost Fleet, Burn-In, and LikeWar: The Weaponization of Social Media In Big Data Shocks (2018), Andrew Weiss had already started to take a critical and sophisticated view on the shocking nature of the digital reality we have created. In The Dark Side of Our Digital World, he takes the logical next step, and goes way beyond librarianship, and into some of the most fundamental building blocks of the shadows of the technological paradigm that characterizes our generation. In a refreshing and easy-to-read style, he interweaves up-to-date examples from current events, with long-standing concepts from academic research. From nudging, to surveillance, to deep fakes, to the role of bots, to the future of democracy, Andrew Weiss take readers on an enjoyable journey that invites to reflect on a series of naturally arising questions: Do we make our own decisions?, Why is it hard to quit?, Do you want the carrot or the stick?, What is truth?, Mind over matter, or matter over mind?, Freedom or safety?, Who watches the watchman?, Whose culture is it, anyway?, and most pressing What are we going to do about it?. Each one of us will have to answer the questions that arise from this book, first for ourselves, and then, for the sake of helping us all to find a sustainable way forward. It is the inexcusable responsibility of each user of digital technology to be informed about the Dark Side of Our Digital World: And What You Can Do about It. -- Martin Hilbert, professor, Chair DE Computational Social Science, Dpt Communication, DataLab, GG, Computer Science, University of California, Davis