Portuguese language

Published June 14, 2013

ISBN:
978-85-7559-307-3
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3 stars (2 reviews)

Cypherpunks: Freedom and the Future of the Internet is a 2012 book by Julian Assange, in discussion with Internet activists and cypherpunks Jacob Appelbaum, Andy Müller-Maguhn and Jérémie Zimmermann. Its primary topic is society's relationship with information security. In the book, the authors warn that the Internet has become a tool of the police state, and that the world is inadvertently heading toward a form of totalitarianism. They promote the use of cryptography to protect against state surveillance.In the introduction, Assange says that the book is "not a manifesto [...] [but] a warning". He told Guardian journalist Decca Aitkenhead:

A well-defined mathematical algorithm can encrypt something quickly, but to decrypt it would take billions of years–or trillions of dollars' worth of electricity to drive the computer. So cryptography is the essential building block of independence for organisations on the Internet, just like armies are the essential building blocks of states, …

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Review of 'Cypherpunks' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

A series of conversations about the internet, privacy, digital surveillance, the militarisation of cyberspace and more, from the people whose vision of digital freedoms has been under siege by both state power and corporations the world over for many years now. And it is not only specific topics on technology but also occasional philosophical forays into questions of types of freedoms and their fundamental nature.