What would it take to hack a human? How exploitable are we? In the cybersecurity industry, professionals know that the weakest component of any system sits between the chair and the keyboard. This book looks to speculative fiction, cyberpunk and the digital humanities to bring a human — and humanistic — perspective to the issue of cybersecurity. It argues that through these stories we are able to predict the future political, cultural, and social realities emerging from technological change. Making the case for a security-minded humanities education, this book examines pressing issues of data security, privacy, social engineering and more, illustrating how the humanities offer the critical, technical, and ethical insights needed to oppose the normalization of surveillance, disinformation, and coercion.Within this counter-cultural approach to technology, this book offers a model of activism to intervene and meaningfully resist government and corporate oversight online. In doing so, it argues for a wider notion of literacy, which includes the ability to write and fight the computer code that shapes our lives.
Aaron Mauro is Assistant Professor of Digital Media at Brock University, Canada.
Preface1. Human Exploits: An Introduction to Hacking and the Humanities2. “Hack the Planet”: Pop Hackers and the Demands of a Real World Resistance3. Academic Attack Surfaces: Culture Jamming the Future and XML Bombs4. Supply Chain Attacks and Knowledge Networks: Network Sovereignty and the Interplanetary Internet5.Cryptographic Agility and the Right to Privacy: Secret Writing and the Cypherpunks6. Biohacking and Autonomous Androids: Human Evolution and Biometric Data7. Gray Hat Humanities: Surveillance Capitalism, Object Oriented Ontology, and Design FictionSelected BibliographyIndex
Open, accessible, engaging, energetic, and enthusing – Hacking in the Humanitiesexplores essential impulses of today’s digital humanities in the context of their intellectual foundations, their current possibilities, and their necessary reflection of and in the human condition.
Jennifer Edmond, Nicola Horsley, Jörg Lehmann, Mike Priddy, Ireland) Edmond, Jennifer (Trinity College Dublin, Germany) Lehmann, Jorg (University of Tubingen, Anthony Mandal
Jennifer Edmond, Nicola Horsley, Jörg Lehmann, Mike Priddy, Ireland) Edmond, Jennifer (Trinity College Dublin, Germany) Lehmann, Jorg (University of Tubingen, Anthony Mandal
Jennifer Edmond, Nicola Horsley, Jörg Lehmann, Mike Priddy, Ireland) Edmond, Jennifer (Trinity College Dublin, Germany) Lehmann, Jorg (University of Tubingen, Anthony Mandal