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The Almighty Buck Books Sci-Fi

Cory Doctorow's New Thriller Dramatizes 'Cryptocurrency Shenanigans' and 'Financial Rot' (macmillan.com) 29

Cory Doctorow just wrote a new thriller "about cryptocurrency shenanigans that will awaken you to how the world really works," according to his publisher. Doctorow calls Red Team Blues "a book about the financial rot at the center of Silicon Valley... a kind of anti-finance finance thriller."

The publisher describes the book's hero as "a self-employed forensic accountant, a veteran of the long guerilla war between people who want to hide money, and people who want to find it. " He knows computer hardware and software alike, including the ins and outs of high-end databases and the kinds of spreadsheets that are designed to conceal rather than reveal. He's as comfortable with social media as people a quarter his age, and he's a world-level expert on the kind of international money-laundering and shell-company chicanery used by Fortune 500 companies, mid-divorce billionaires, and international drug gangs alike.

He also knows the Valley like the back of his hand, all the secret histories of charismatic company founders and Sand Hill Road VCs. Because he was there at all the beginnings. He's not famous, except to the people who matter. He's made some pretty powerful people happy in his time, and he's been paid pretty well. It's been a good life.

Now he's been roped into a job that's more dangerous than anything he's ever agreed to before — and it will take every ounce of his skill to get out alive.

"I write when I'm anxious, and right now these are anxious times," Doctorow explained last month in Publisher's Weekly, describing what he'd learned about selling audiobooks without going through Amazon's service Audible. This time Cory got 4,080 backers to pledge $152,735 to fund an audiobook for Red Team Blues read by Wil Wheaton that his Kickstarter campaign stressed would be DRM-free. ("Every audiobook sold on Audible be wrapped in Amazon's Digital Rights Management technology, which is a felony for you to remove, even if the copyright holder asks you to. It's punishable by a five-year prison sentence and a $500,000 fine!")

Red Team Blues is the first book in a new trilogy, and Cory is now making in-person appearances to promote the book — starting today (and tomorrow) at the LA Times Festival of Books at the University of Southern California. Tuesday he'll be in San Diego, and a week from Sunday he's appearing in San Francisco, before heading to Portland, Mountain View, Berkeley, and Gaithersburg Maryland.
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Cory Doctorow's New Thriller Dramatizes 'Cryptocurrency Shenanigans' and 'Financial Rot'

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  • I feel like the era of bottom-up crypto has ended, and the only real risk is now governments adopting it as a convenient way to spy on everyone even more than now, via the public ledger. Doctrow better start his new book, where all the young men fall in love with AI waifus and drop out of society.

    • "I feel like the era of bottom-up crypto has ended"

      No way, there are still *so many* fools out there waiting to be parted from their money. That ain't going nowhere

      • "I feel like the era of bottom-up crypto has ended"

        No way, there are still *so many* fools out there waiting to be parted from their money. That ain't going nowhere

        Don't need crypto for that, just another election cycle -- fools and their money will be parted.

    • I feel like the era of bottom-up crypto has ended

      It pretty much jumped the shark when they put an NFT joke in the Santa Clause Disney+ series.

    • Government won't adopt it because no KYC and no freeze account button. Much though it's popular to hate Bitcoin, you can't get unpersoned on it as easily as banks/PayPal.
  • When the bottom fell out of the cryptocurrency market, even non-technical people became aware of the scam. At this point, it's likely very few people need to be "awakened" to it.

    But some people here like reading his stuff, so - here's a new book for you to buy.

    • But some people here like reading his stuff, so - here's a new book for you to buy.

      I thought ChatGPT was supposed to be putting people like him out of a job. Out of curiosity, I asked ChatGPT to produce a short psychological thriller about cryptocurrency. It produced a story about a guy who gets taken for a crypto scam and then kills himself. That was darker than I expected.

      • ...Out of curiosity, I asked ChatGPT to produce a short psychological thriller about cryptocurrency. It produced a story about a guy who gets taken for a crypto scam and then kills himself. That was darker than I expected.

        Hmm. Ask it to do it in the style of Twilight Zone's "To Serve Man". See if it comes up with avocado and toast.

    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      Well, not quite. There are still tons of believers. But these are hardcore ignorant and cannot simply be presented with facts. More likely every last of the true believers has to go bankrupt before they start noticing that they may have been wrong all along and a book is not going to do that.

  • by Sloppy ( 14984 ) on Saturday April 22, 2023 @01:30PM (#63469842) Homepage Journal

    Every audiobook sold on Audible be wrapped in Amazon's Digital Rights Management technology, which is a felony for you to remove, even if the copyright holder asks you to. It's punishable by a five-year prison sentence and a $500,000 fine!

    Can anyone explain what law this is a reference to? It surely isn't DMCA, because DMCA's 1201(a)(3)(A) defines "circumvention" as:

    to “circumvent a technological measure” means to descramble a scrambled work, to decrypt an encrypted work, or otherwise to avoid, bypass, remove, deactivate, or impair a technological measure, without the authority of the copyright owner

    which of course means that if the copyright owner authorizes defeating the DRM, then there's no way to for "circumvention" to ever happen, so all the rest of the shit in 1201(a) doesn't apply to the situation. You most certainly may remove the DRM if the copyright owner authorizes it.

    I suppose he might be talking about 1201(b)(2)(B), where circumvention's definition doesn't mention anything about copyright owners' authority..

    “circumvent protection afforded by a technological measure” means avoiding, bypassing, removing, deactivating, or otherwise impairing a technological measure

    .. and that's the part which prohibits manufacturing or trafficking in the things one uses to access the plaintext. But that's different from actually doing the DRM removal.

    Also, it seems reasonable to infer that copyright owner's authorization likely still plays a part, or else it would be illegal to even manufacture licensed DVD players, your web browser's widevide decoder would be illegal, etc. Basically, anything that is compatible with a DRM scheme must necessarily be a violation, and I haven't read any stories that Sony, Google, Microsoft etc have recently been sued to death.

    So if it's not DMCA that he's talking about, what is it?

    • by xeoron ( 639412 )
      If it helps, Cory covers this and more in his book Chokepoint Capitalism [libro.fm]! Also, Cory has said in his Kickstarter that the 2nd and 3rd books are written and submitted to his publisher who badly wanted more in the series after reading the first book script. Book 2 comes out next year, and 3 the year after that. If you want the audiobook, it will be sold here: Red Team Blues [libro.fm]
  • Excellent (Score:4, Insightful)

    by demon driver ( 1046738 ) on Saturday April 22, 2023 @01:56PM (#63469878) Journal

    Being one of a small group of excellent writers which make today's SF matter, among which I'd see at least John Scalzi and Charles Stross, too, Doctorow perhaps might be the one of them whose critique of society and economy is the most pronounced, the most spot-on and the most relevent for the present... Can't wait to read this.

    • Alain Damasio is another great author whose SF novels describe the possible drift of technologies in our society: surveillance, augmented reality, etc. Unfortunately it seems his works, originally in French, haven't been translated to English.
  • I love science fiction. I desperately want newer/modern era sci-fi writers to succeed. So it's incredibly troubling to me that Doctorow's work is trending downward, HARD.

    Overclocked (2007) is an excellent collection of short stories that got every reader excited about Doctorow's potential.

    Pirate Cinema (2012) is engaging and about serious issues, but first and foremost is a fun read which mitigates the juvenile-ishness.

    Walkaway (2017) is one of the BEST sci-fi books written in the last decade, period.

  • I can't say it's the best book I've read, but it's interesting, though not for the mass consumer. I might have picked it up for review in college, but I was more interested in working with How Democratic Was Andrew Jackson, which I used as an example essay https://gradesfixer.com/free-essay-examples/how-democratic-was-andrew-jackson-2/ [gradesfixer.com] which even helped me out a bit. I lacked the collected material for a full-fledged work and found the last puzzle pieces in the already completed papers. Otherwise, it's just

Computer programmers do it byte by byte.

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