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The Cult of the Amateur: How today's Internet is killing our culture

Currency (Jun 5, 2007)
Hardcover – 228 pages
ISBN-10: 0385520808
ISBN-13: 9780385520805

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smurfiechowchow
smurfiechowchow wrote and rated
  • 3.0 of 5 stars
on Feb 9, 2008 at 6:18 am

Book summary at:
http://smurfiechowchow.blogspot.com/2008/02/cult-of-amate...

With so many web 2.0 supporters, it is important for someone to raise an opposite perspective of the downsides of this latest technological driver, so as to remind us that things are not as perfect as they seem, and really ask whether we are ready to accept these downsides. The author received many criticisms (as I surveyed the book reviews in Amazon), especially from apparent web 2.0 supporters. I am a web 2.0 supporter and believes that this technology advancement is almost impossible to stop from influencing our daily lives. But there are indeed some measures to be taken to properly manage the downsides and also take the development at a suitable pace. Some issues that were raised were indeed quite eye-opening and including myself, have not thought of them. It does set me thinking of these possible scenarios and what would my reactions be. I greatly dislike the tone of his writing which is very unfriendly and ever so attacking. The book seems to be a pure complain message to the web 2.0 community - which I feel if he wants to ensure the community to take his argument objectively, he could have watched his tone. He has valid points but as I mentioned, he is not putting them across in a proper manner, which makes me feel the points are not strongly justified. (read less)

Book summary at:
http://smurfiechowchow.blogspot.com/2008/02/cult-of-amate...

With so many web 2.0 supporters, it is important for someone to raise an opposite perspective of the downsides of this latest technological driver, so as to remind us that things are not as perfect as they seem, and really ask whether we are ready to accept these downsides. The author received many criticisms (as I surveyed the book reviews in Amazon), especially from apparent web 2.0 supporters. I am a... (read more)

bleongcw
bleongcw wrote
on Aug 29, 2007 at 6:43 am

I have recently read this book and offer a review in my <a href="http://bleongcw.typepad.com/simple_is_the_reason_of_m/200...">blog</a> and contrasted it with Wikinomics, another book that explore the web 2.0 phenomenon from the business perspective.

The central thesis of this book is that the amateurism introduced by blogs (Blogger, Wordpress and Movable Type), videos (YouTube) and wikis (Wikipedia) has eroded our culture towards a dangerous world where the distinction between expert and amateur is being obscured and only the loudest and the extreme dominate in the digital world. Of course, in this book, the author did attempt to tear apart why the wikipedia is not a reliable source of information (given that anyone can edit anything they like) and the economics of the long tail purported by Chris Anderson. I do agree with the author that there is a need for recognized experts' opinion on wikipedia entries instead of allowing an egalitarian approach to specialized information. (read less)

I have recently read this book and offer a review in my <a href="http://bleongcw.typepad.com/simple_is_the_reason_of_m/200...">blog</a> and contrasted it with Wikinomics, another book that explore the web 2.0 phenomenon from the business perspective.

The central thesis of this book is that the amateurism introduced by blogs (Blogger, Wordpress and Movable Type), videos (YouTube) and wikis (Wikipedia) has eroded our culture towards a dangerous world where the distinction between e... (read more)

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