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A FINANCIAL TIMES BOOK OF THE MONTH  FROM THE WALL STREET JOURNAL: "Nothing Mr. Gilder says or writes is ever delivered at anything less than the fullest philosophical decibel... Mr. Gilder sounds less like a tech guru than a poet, and his words tumble out in a romantic cascade." âEURGoogleâEUR(TM)s algorithms assume the worldâEUR(TM)s future is nothing more than the next moment in a random process. George Gilder shows how deep this assumption goes, what motivates people to make it, and why itâEUR(TM)s wrong: the future depends on human action.âEUR? âEUR" Peter Thiel, founder of PayPal…mehr

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A FINANCIAL TIMES BOOK OF THE MONTH  FROM THE WALL STREET JOURNAL: "Nothing Mr. Gilder says or writes is ever delivered at anything less than the fullest philosophical decibel... Mr. Gilder sounds less like a tech guru than a poet, and his words tumble out in a romantic cascade." âEURGoogleâEUR(TM)s algorithms assume the worldâEUR(TM)s future is nothing more than the next moment in a random process. George Gilder shows how deep this assumption goes, what motivates people to make it, and why itâEUR(TM)s wrong: the future depends on human action.âEUR? âEUR" Peter Thiel, founder of PayPal and Palantir Technologies and author of Zero to One: Notes on Startups, or How to Build the Future The Age of Google, built on big data and machine intelligence, has been an awesome era. But itâEUR(TM)s coming to an end. In Life after Google, George GilderâEUR"the peerless visionary of technology and cultureâEUR"explains why Silicon Valley is suffering a nervous breakdown and what to expect as the post-Google age dawns. GoogleâEUR(TM)s astonishing ability to âEURsearch and sortâEUR? attracts the entire world to its search engine and countless other goodiesâEUR"videos, maps, email, calendarsâEUR¿.And everything it offers is free, or so it seems. Instead of paying directly, users submit to advertising. The system of âEURaggregate and advertiseâEUR? worksâEUR"for a whileâEUR"if you control an empire of data centers, but a market without prices strangles entrepreneurship and turns the Internet into a wasteland of ads. The crisis is not just economic. Even as advances in artificial intelligence induce delusions of omnipotence and transcendence, Silicon Valley has pretty much given up on security. The Internet firewalls supposedly protecting all those passwords and personal information have proved hopelessly permeable. The crisis cannot be solved within the current computer and network architecture. The future lies with the âEURcryptocosmâEUR?âEUR"the new architecture of the blockchain and its derivatives. Enabling cryptocurrencies such as bitcoin and ether, NEO and Hashgraph, it will provide the Internet a secure global payments system, ending the aggregate-and-advertise Age of Google. Silicon Valley, long dominated by a few giants, faces a âEURgreat unbundling,âEUR? which will disperse computer power and commerce and transform the economy and the Internet. Life after Google is almost here.
Autorenporträt
George Gilder, one of America's leading economic and technological thinkers, is the author of many groundbreaking books, including Wealth and Poverty, Knowledge and Power, The Scandal of Money, and Life after Google. A founding fellow of the Discovery Institute, where he began his study of information theory, and an influential venture capitalist, he lives with his wife on his family farm in western Massachusetts.