Review
------
"We Are Data spells out the implications of being made of data in the digital age: our new 'algorithmic
identity.' John Cheney-Lippold shows how algorithmic logics that undergird the architecture, regulation, monetization,
and uses of the Internet have changed the nature of human experience and identity. Through witty and accessible
examples, he eloquently lays out the social and political consequences of transcoding lived identity into measurable
types in our new world. Clearly written, carefully researched, timely and intelligent, We Are Data is a compelling and
much-needed book."-Alexandra Juhasz, Chair, Film Department, Brooklyn College
"This book sparkles with brilliant ins. It offers us tools and a vocabulary through which we can think about the
layers of identities that our data-conjured ghosts inhabit. I don't think I fully grasped the complexity of what these
clouds of commercial data did with us and to us until I read We Are Data."-Siva Vaidhyanathan, author of The
Googlization of Everything--and Why We Should Worry
"John Cheney-Lippold's deft examination of 'measurable types'--the categories by which we are known and assessed, based
on our data--sheds light on contemporary society's encounter with information systems to scrutiny, and with those eager
to identify us for their own ends. We Are Data goes beyond naming possible harms. It helps us think differently about
what it means to be 'seen' by marketers, algorithms, or the NSA as members of shifting categories--identifications that
structure us and our encounter with the world, but that we have little power to shape."-Tarleton Gillespie, author of
Wired Shut: Copyright and the Shape of Digital Culture
"A heady and rewarding explanation of our lives in the data age. [Cheney-Lippold's] discussion of privacy...will
fascinate many. Essential reading for anyone who cares about the internet's extraordinary impact on each of us and on
our society."-Starred Kirkus Reviews
"If knowledge is indeed the means by which we can begin to challenge the digital status quo, then Cheney-Lippold has
done much to forearm us by so capably elucidating the problem."-LSE Review of Books
"The text moves beyond overdone topics of online privacy to look at how the lack of privacy of our data impacts
identities... It is the most appropriate for social science researchers and students."-Choice
Review
------
“We Are Data spells out the implications of being made of data in the digital age: our new ‘algorithmic
identity.’ John Cheney-Lippold shows how algorithmic logics that undergird the architecture, regulation, monetization,
and uses of the Internet have changed the nature of human experience and identity. Through witty and accessible
examples, he eloquently lays out the social and political consequences of transcoding lived identity into measurable
types in our new world. Clearly written, carefully researched, timely and intelligent, We Are Data is a compelling and
much-needed book.”-Alexandra Juhasz,Chair, Film Department, Brooklyn College
“This book sparkles with brilliant ins. It offers us tools and a vocabulary through which we can think about the
layers of identities that our data-conjured ghosts inhabit. I don’t think I fully grasped the complexity of what these
clouds of commercial data did with us and to us until I read We Are Data.”-Siva Vaidhyanathan,author of The Googlization
of Everything―and Why We Should Worry
“The text moves beyond overdone topics of online privacy to look at how the lack of privacy of our data impacts
identities… It is the most appropriate for social science researchers and students.”-Choice
"A heady and rewarding explanation of our lives in the data age. [Cheney-Lippold's] discussion of privacy...will
fascinate many. Essential reading for anyone who cares about the internet's extraordinary impact on each of us and on
our society."-Starred Kirkus Reviews
“John Cheney-Lippold’s deft examination of ‘measurable types’―the categories by which we are known and assessed, based
on our data―sheds light on contemporary society’s encounter with information systems to scrutiny, and with those eager
to identify us for their own ends. We Are Data goes beyond naming possible harms. It helps us think differently about
what it means to be ‘seen’ by marketers, algorithms, or the NSA as members of shifting categories―identifications that
structure us and our encounter with the world, but that we have little power to shape.”-Tarleton Gillespie,author of
Wired Shut: Copyright and the Shape of Digital Culture
"If knowledge is indeed the means by which we can begin to challenge the digital status quo, then Cheney-Lippold has
done much to forearm us by so capably elucidating the problem."-LSE Review of Books