<pre>How one company is disrupting culture, commerce and commerce ... and<br>why we should worry!<br><br>This blog, the result of a collaboration between myself and the<br>Institute for the Future of the Book, is dedicated to exploring the<br>
process of writing a critical interpretation of the actions and<br>intentions behind the cultural behemoth that is Google, Inc. The book<br>will answer three key questions: What does the world look like through<br>the lens of Google?; How is Google's ubiquity affecting the production<br>
and dissemination of knowledge?; and how has the corporation altered<br>the rules and practices that govern other companies, institutions, and<br>states? [more]<br><br>* * *<br><br>Hi. Welcome to my book.<br><br>Hi. Welcome to my new book. Well, it's not a book yet. In fact, it<br>
will not be a real book for a long time.<br><br>As you can tell from the title of this blog, the book will be about<br>Google and all they ways that Google is shaking up the world. Google<br>is a transformative and revolutionary company. I hesitate to use terms<br>
like that. We live in an era of hyperbole. So I try my best to<br>discount claims of historical transformation or communicative<br>revolutions.<br><br>But in the case of Google, I am confident it is both.<br><br>Now, I am approaching this book as both a fan and a critic. I am in<br>
awe of all that Google has done and all it hopes to do. I am also wary<br>of its ambition and power.<br><br>As I use this site to compose the manuscript (an archaic word that I<br>love too much to discard) for the book The Googlization of Everything,<br>
I hope to do so with your help.<br><br>This is the latest in a series of "open book" experiments hosted and<br>guided by The Institute for the Future of the Book. The Institute has<br>been supportive of my work for years -- long before I became<br>
affiliated with it as a fellow and certainly long before we thought up<br>this project together. As with the other projects by Ken Wark and<br>Mitch Stephens, this one will depend on reader criticism and feedback<br>to work right. So this is an appeal for help. If you know something<br>
about Google, hip me to it. If you have an observation about how it<br>works or how it affects our lives, write to me about it.<br><br>On occasion, I will post an open question on this blog. Please help me<br>answer it.<br>
<br>I have never tried to write a book this way. Few have. Writing has<br>been a lonely, selfish pursuit for me so far. I tend to wall myself<br>off from the world (and my loved ones) for days at a time in fits and<br>spurts when I get into a writing groove. I don't shave. I order pizza.<br>
I grumble. I ignore emails from my mother.<br><br>I tend to comb through and revise every sentence five or six times<br>(although I am not sure that actually shows up in the quality of my<br>prose). Only when I am sure that I have not embarrassed myself (or<br>
when the editor calls to threaten me with a canceled contract �<br>whichever comes first) do I show anyone what I have written. Now, this<br>is not an uncommon process. Closed composition is the default among<br>writers. We go to great lengths to develop trusted networks of readers<br>
and other writers with whom we can workshop � or as I prefer to call<br>it because it's what the jazz musicians do, woodshed our work.<br><br>Well, I am going to do my best to woodshed in public. As I compose<br>bits and pieces of work, I will post them here. They might be very<br>
brief bits. They might never make it into the manuscript. But they<br>will be up here for you to rip up or smooth over.<br><br>That's the thing. For a number of years now I have made my bones in<br>the intellectual world trumpeting the virtues of openness and the<br>
values of connectivity. I was an early proponent of applying "open<br>source" models to scholarship, journalism, and lots of other things.<br><br>And, more to the point: One of my key concerns with Google is that it<br>
is a black box. Something that means so much to us reveals so little<br>of itself.<br><br>So I would be a hypocrite if I wrote this book any other way. This<br>book will not be a black box.<br><br>Of course, it could get ugly in here. I could make tremendous<br>
mistakes. I could shoot something out there that shuts all doors at<br>Google. I could undermine my ultimate market (but I seriously doubt<br>that I could). I could just write myself into a corner.<br><br>In my next post I will share a rough chapter outline. And I will give<br>
some sense of the basic questions and major issues that I hope to<br>tackle in this work.<br><br>Ok. As Sgt. Phil used to say, "Let's roll. And let's be careful out there."<br><br>Send me links, questions and ideas:<br>
siva [at] googlizationofeverything [dot] com<br><br><a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="http://www.googlizationofeverything.com/2007/09/hi_welcome_to_my_book.php">http://www.googlizationofeverything.com/2007/09/hi_welcome_to_my_book.php</a><br>
<br>* * *<br><br>Like the Mind of God (6 posts)<br><br>All the World's Information (5 posts)<br><br>What If Big Ads Don't Work (4 posts)<br><br>Don't Be Evil (3 posts)<br><br>Is Google a Library? (15 posts)<br>
<br>Challenging Big Media (11 posts)<br><br>The Dossier (3 posts)<br><br>Global Google (1 post)<br><br>Google Earth (no posts)<br><br>A Public Utility? (7 posts)<br><br>About this Book (7 post<br><br>Siva Vaidhyanathan<br>
(how do you pronounce that?)<br><br><br>Siva Vaidhyanathan I am a cultural historian and media scholar at the<br>University of Virginia. I have written two previous books: Copyrights<br>and Copywrongs: The Rise of Intellectual Property and How it Threatens<br>
Creativity (New York University Press, 2001) and The Anarchist in the<br>Library: How the Clash between Freedom and Control is Hacking the Real<br>World and Crashing the System (Basic Books, 2004). Most recently I<br>edited (with Carolyn de la Pena) the collection, Rewiring the Nation:<br>
The Place of Technology in American Studies (Johns Hopkins University<br>Press, 2007).<br><br>I've written for many periodicals, including American Scholar, The<br>Chronicle of Higher Education, The New York Times Magazine, <a href="http://MSNBC.COM">MSNBC.COM</a>,<br>
<a href="http://Salon.com">Salon.com</a>, openDemocracy.net, Columbia Journalism Review, and The<br>Nation. I also blog at <a href="http://SIVACRACY.NET">SIVACRACY.NET</a>.<br><br>After five years as a professional journalist, I earned a Ph.D. in<br>
American Studies from the University of Texas at Austin. I've taught<br>at Wesleyan University, the University of Wisconsin at Madison,<br>Columbia University, New York University, and is this fall began as an<br>associate professor of Media Studies and Law at the University of<br>
Virginia. I'm also a fellow at the New York Institute for the<br>Humanities and the Institute for the Future of the Book.</pre>