I subscribe to and read Cory Doctorow’s blog at pluralistic.net. He publishes there regularly, discussing his ideas on the intersection of technology and politics. When he recently published a book in a similar vein discussing the concept and word he coined back in 2022, I immediately purchased it. I finally got around to actually reading it this month.
Doctorow explained enshittification in a January 2023 article in Wired magazine:
Here is how platforms die: first, they are good to their users; then they abuse their users to make things better for their business customers; finally, they abuse those business customers to claw back all the value for themselves. Then, they die. I call this enshittification….
Part 1 of the book shows how this happened with four platforms (Facebook, Amazon, iPhone, and Twitter). Part 2 is a short chapter how we got on the path to platform decay. Part 3 is a detailed review of what previously prevented enshittification and how those stopgaps were eroded. Finally, in Part 4 the author lays out a plan for overcoming the issues he laid out in the previous three parts of the book.
The book is engaging and informative. The writing is conversational and lays out technical ideas in everyday language that anyone can understand. This is a primer for our times on how the internet has become the cesspool that it is and how to get back to what Doctorow calls “an old, good internet.” It is an excellent, if not essential, read for everyone with one exception. If you regularly read his blog, none of this is new. It is, however, an excellent and concise explanation of the author’s technology philosophy. I highly recommend it.
My rating: 4/5