Saturday, May 16, 2026

Enshittification: Why Everything Suddenly Got Worse and What to Do About ItEnshittification: Why Everything Suddenly Got Worse and What to Do About It by Cory Doctorow
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

I can't recommend this enough. In fact, I think it should be required reading for anyone sick and tired of the general enshittification we've all been experiencing.

And while it's a word we all use now, or at least I have been, I should point out that Cory Doctorow, wonderful novelist and even better non-fiction writer, was the one to COIN the word.

That's no small feat. And this is no cash-grab of a book, either. It's an extremely coherent and exhaustive analysis of where we are through the lens of how the technological feudalism began and how it transformed from a value-laden service into the nasty bullshit factory it has become.

Google, Meta/Facebook, Twitter, HP, Microsoft, and we can't forget Elon. It's all part and parcel of a great enshittification that begins with undercutting and driving everyone else out of business by subsidies, graduating to squeezing the end users in favor of the suppliers, then squeezing the suppliers as well because you're officially too big to lose or give a shit about anyone but your shareholders.

Sound familiar?

And because it's becoming such a standard business model, we now have subscription services for our car seats, printer ink that will brick your printer unless you pay a monthly rent, and much darker features across the board, including but not limited to medical devices, fresh drinking water, any DRM enshittified software or books you buy which can go poof at any time, or the fact that the prices you pay for anything can change on the fly to reflect how your software's spy algorithms have determined that it can SQUEEZE you just that little bit more.

Sound familiar?

Well, Cory Doctorow doesn't just give us rage bait in this book. He goes into detail about history, anti-trust laws, regulation, unions, and how each and every one of us can fight back realistically. And I'm not saying we have to get our pitchforks from the pitchfork emporium, either. I'm saying that we've SEEN the changes in a lot of our own lifetimes. And while those changes DID enshittify, there were always brief periods where it DID get better. The point is to codify safeguards DURING those transformative periods to prevent monopolies from taking over.

As they very much have.

So take the early days of the internet with hope, people. Ma Bell seemed monolithic. And then we had a brief spell of freedom. The point is not to go the unregulated path again. Insist on healthy business practices. The current businesses are imploding. We have the know-how, the will to create good things. It is entirely possible--assuming we don't let the predators and the IP litigators (all on the side of the businesses) set such a pace that they will start making us rent the very air we breathe.

Feudalism, indeed. Land owners. Allowing us to produce our own lives on the land THEY own. Sound familiar? All the tech we keep buying. All the smart features. They're preventing us from OWNING anything we buy. It's ALL rented. One way or another.

Public outcry against enshittification WILL happen, whether or not we call it that officially. Too many people are already at the ends of their ropes.

Will change come peacefully? It can. People just need to build something that far outperforms the middlemen who have us all by the balls and then prevent it from being sold out to the enshittifiers.

Doctorow's enthusiasm and optimism is truly a marvel to read.

Again, don't sleep on this.

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None of This Is TrueNone of This Is True by Lisa Jewell
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

I think I wanted to like this more than I did. Unfortunately, social media types don't really float my boat and it only got a bit worse when pedos are being defended, however twistily, in a tale. Sure, blame everyone involved, right? Make sure it's VERY clear that the girl got herself in on it with open eyes, yada, yada. But let's not think this is a retelling of Lolita.

The twisty plot was okay, otherwise, but the rest kinda put a damper on my enjoyment. Alas.

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William Shakespeare's Star Wars: Verily, A New Hope (William Shakespeare's Star Wars, #4)William Shakespeare's Star Wars: Verily, A New Hope by Ian Doescher
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

This made me so ticklish.

Lines right from Shakespeare appropriated to Star wars, and the rest, twisted lightly to heightened language. :)

A real joy to read. Especially about that right knave, R2D2, also known as Hal. :)

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Friday, May 15, 2026

Blame!, Vol. 10Blame!, Vol. 10 by Tsutomu Nihei
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Wild, mythical, strange, and hauntingly beautiful.

And let's not forget--unutterably sad.


This manga flies in the face of most manga. It's unapologetically dense and forces you to speculate just to keep up with the action, but more than that, it's transcendental. Lovecraftian, H.R. Geigerish, totally cyberpunk in every sense of the term, but also a pure Childe Roland to the Dark Tower Came feel. Only, unlike King's version, this is a true dark tower for the whole series and it does just about all those feelings JUSTICE.

To be fair, it's also extremely minimalistic. Nobody will ever explain much of anything. But out of the hints and the things we do get, it's powerful.

I think I might consider this one of my favorites. Not because it's universally accessible (it isn't) but because it's awesomely brave.

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Blame!, Vol. 9Blame!, Vol. 9 by Tsutomu Nihei
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

And now I'm getting the DISTINCT feeling I got in the later parts of Nier Automata. It's a very unique feeling. And now that I'm reading Blame! this way, I'm really respecting it a lot more because it came out first. Or perhaps I respect Nier more for how it really ran with aspects of Blame!?

I don't know. Blame! goes rather hard and a lot farther in some ways. It's very impressive, either way.

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Blame!, Vol. 8Blame!, Vol. 8 by Tsutomu Nihei
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

I can't say I understand what's going on--still--but damn it's interesting. And Cibo? Not just three or four times am I going WTF, but it's definitely intensifying now.

Head scientist my ass.

Hackers nightmare. Or dream.

Weirdly, I'm reading all this and getting massive Hellsing vibes now. That's a good thing. An amazing thing.

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Blame!, Vol. 7Blame!, Vol. 7 by Tsutomu Nihei
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

New character, new wrinkle, but it only deepens the story.

Those damn human genes are a real nasty piece of work. Everyone seems to want them. :)

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Enshittification: Why Everything Suddenly Got Worse and What to Do About It by Cory Doctorow My rating: 5 of 5 stars I can't recommen...