Douglas Rushkoff Quotes About Technology

We have collected for you the TOP of Douglas Rushkoff's best quotes about Technology! Here are collected all the quotes about Technology starting from the birthday of the Writer – February 18, 1961! We hope you will be inspired to new achievements with our constantly updated collection of quotes. At the moment, this page contains 16 sayings of Douglas Rushkoff about Technology. We will be happy if you share our collection of quotes with your friends on social networks!
  • No matter how invasive the technologies at their disposal, marketers and pollsters never come to terms with the living process through which people choose products or candidates; they are looking at what people just bought or thought, and making calculations based on that after-the-fact data.

    Douglas Rushkoff (2013). “Present Shock: When Everything Happens Now”, p.8, Penguin
  • Our fear of technology is really a fear of empowerment. We now have the ability to design the reality we live in, and we have to step up to the occasion.

  • I feel like the smartest people in my field are busy reinforcing the old models with new technology.

    Source: www.avclub.com
  • Whether it's watching a $4,000 laptop fall off the conveyor belt at airport security, contending with a software conflict that corrupted your file management system, or begging your family to stop opening those virus-carrying 'greeting cards' attached to emails, all computer owners are highly leveraged and highly vulnerable technology investors.

  • Digiphrenia”—the way our media and technologies encourage us to be in more than one place at the same time.

    Douglas Rushkoff (2013). “Present Shock: When Everything Happens Now”, p.8, Penguin
  • I am much less concerned with whatever it is technology may be doing to people that what people are choosing to do to one another through technology. Facebook's reduction of people to predictively modeled profiles and investment banking's convolution of the marketplace into an algorithmic battleground were not the choices of machines.

    Douglas Rushkoff (2013). “Present Shock: When Everything Happens Now”, p.162, Penguin
  • As a digital technology writer, I have had more than one former student and colleague tell me about digital switchers they have serviced through which calls and data are diverted to government servers or the big data algorithms they've written to be used on our e-mails by intelligence agencies.

    "Edward Snowden is a hero". Article by Douglas Rushkoff, edition.cnn.com. June 11, 2013.
  • ... we're moving into an era when we will define ourselves more by the technologies we refuse than the ones we accept.

  • The early cyberpunk idea was that networked computers would let us do our work at home, as freelancers, and then transact directly with peers over networks. Digital technology would create tremendous slack, allow us to apply its asynchronous, decentralized qualities to our own work and lives.

    "Living In The Present Is A Disorder". Interview with R.U. Sirius, www.wired.com. April 8, 2013.
  • Our technologies become more complex while we become more simple. They learn about us while we come to know less and less about them. No one person can understand everything going on in an iPhone, much less pervasive systems.

    "Program or be Programmed: The GeekDad". Interview with Jason Cranfordteague, www.wired.com. July 29, 2011.
  • Our enthusiasm for digital technology about which we have little understanding and over which we have little control leads us not toward greater agency, but toward less...We have surrendered the unfolding of a new technological age to a small elite who have seized the capability on offer. But while Renaissance kings maintained their monopoly over the printing press by force, today's elite is depending on little more than our own disinterest.

  • New technologies are wreaking havoc on employment figures - from EZpasses ousting toll collectors to Google-controlled self-driving automobiles rendering taxicab drivers obsolete.

  • Technology has moved away from sharing and toward ownership. This suits software and hardware companies just fine: They create new, bloated programs that require more disk space and processing power. We buy bigger, faster computers, which then require more complex operating systems, and so on.

  • Digital technology is both arousing and distancing. We don't look at the users on the other side as people. They aren't - they're just usernames, Facebook photos and Twitter handles.

    "Cutting social media no answer to flash mobs" by Douglas Rushkoff, www.cnn.com. August 19, 2011.
  • Digiphrenia - how technology lets us be in more than one place - and self - at the same time. Drone pilots suffer more burnout than real-world pilots, as they attempt to live in two worlds - home and battlefield - simultaneously. We all become overwhelmed until we learn to distinguish between data flows (like Twitter) that can only be dipped into, and data storage (like books and emails) that can be fully consumed.

    "Present Shock - Rushkoff". www.rushkoff.com.
  • Our society has reoriented itself to the present moment. Everything is live, real time, and always-on. It’s not a mere speeding up, however much our lifestyles and technologies have accelerated the rate at which we attempt to do things. It’s more of a diminishment of anything that isn’t happening right now—and the onslaught of everything that supposedly is.

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