Little Brother by Cory Doctorow

September 30th, 2008 by kartar Leave a reply »

Everyone should go out now and download or buy a copy of Cory Doctorow’s Little Brother and give it to a teenager. I don’t know a lot of teenagers (the court mandates that :P ) but I am going to seed a few copies about.

It’s not the world’s greatest novel – not even close – but it an important novel. It’s also a little heavy the rhetoric and I don’t know a lot of teenagers who talk like the main character (more’s the pity).

Much like the Max Headroom’s tagline of “20 minutes into the future”, Little Brother set in a RSN . A that has a little of the smell of Big Brother. The same smell a lot of Americans, British and Australians can sense as our civil liberties are slowly eroded in the name of “national ”.

The main character, Marcus, a 17 year old high school student interested in computers, gadgets, role-playing and girls. Shortly after the opening of the a major terrorist incident occurs: the bombing of the BART and the Bay Bridge. In the aftermath of the incident Marcus and three of his friends are detained and interrogated as suspected terrorists. After a week of detention all but one of them freed but warned that the government watching them and told to tell no one they were detained.

Marcus decides to take action and possibly revenge for his missing friend and that’s where the story starts getting interesting.

The main aspect of the that appealed to me the first rate introduction to the whys and hows of privacy and . An introduction that even paranoids like me can appreciate. Doctorow explains , RFID hacking and a bunch of other mechanisms, counter-measures. Most importantly, Little Brother teaches the reader how to THINK about privacy and .

This the key thing missing from a lot of actual “grown-up” – thought leadership. A lot of these provide mechanisms and systems to measure risk and apply controls. Less often do they teach people how to think about threats, how to distil threats into risks and how to apply controls to mitigate those risks. Very rarely, if ever, do they teach you how to think like the attacker.

Little Brother like a distilled HOWTO being a sneaky bastard. It teaches you that paranoia, properly applied, not only healthy but logical given the threats to our privacy and .

Little Brother also demonstrates that sometimes attacking the control almost as effective as attacking a target. Rendering the control inoperative not only lowers the protection of the target but can result in the target’s defenders being tied up trying to protect the control instead of the target.

Overall, an excellent that offers some really useful insights for both adults and teenagers. Go give it to a teenager and hopefully they’ll trust someone over 25 long enough to read it.

You can download the for free at:

http://craphound.com/littlebrother/download/

Or you can buy it via your store or Amazon.

1 comment

  1. Anonymous says:

    I skipped the middle section of your blog because I didn’t want to see any spoilers. I would love to hear your thoughts by section over on our Urban Monarch book club though.

    Check it out here:
    http://www.urbanmonarch.com/category/media/book-club/

Leave a Reply