We Are the Nerds
The Birth and Tumultuous Life of Reddit, the Internet's Culture Laboratory
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- $2.99
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- $2.99
Publisher Description
Named a Best Book of 2018 by Fast Company, this is a "sharply written and brilliantly reported" (Shelf Awareness) look inside Reddit, the wildly popular, often misunderstood website that has changed the culture of the Internet.
Reddit hails itself as "the front page of the Internet." It's the third most-visited website in the United States -- and yet, millions of Americans have no idea what it is.
We Are the Nerds is an engrossing look deep inside this captivating, maddening enterprise, whose army of obsessed users have been credited with everything from solving cold case crimes and spurring tens of millions of dollars in charitable donations to seeding alt-right fury and landing Donald Trump in the White House. We Are the Nerds is a gripping start-up narrative: the story of how Reddit's founders, Steve Huffman and Alexis Ohanian, rose up from their suburban childhoods to become millionaires and create an icon of the digital age -- before seeing the site engulfed in controversies and nearly losing control of it for good.
Based on Christine Lagorio-Chafkin's exclusive access to founders Ohanian and Huffman, We Are the Nerds is also a compelling exploration of the way we all communicate today -- and how we got here. Reddit and its users have become a mirror of the Internet: it has dingy corners, shiny memes, malicious trolls, and a sometimes heart-melting ability to connect people across cultures, oceans, and ideological divides.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Reddit, a social news aggregation and discussion website that brands itself as "the front page of the internet," is as varied, fun, vile, and tedious as the rest of the web, according to this scattershot business history. Inc. journalist Lagorio-Chafkin recounts the founding of Reddit in 2005 by pals Steve Huffman and Alexis Ohanian; helping out was Aaron Swartz, a 20-year-old eccentric programmer (at one point he was on an all-Cheerios diet) and "open access" advocate who later committed suicide in 2013 after being indicted for computer fraud. The book's central theme is the tension between Reddit as populist platform that lets its users control the discourse by upvoting their favorite links, exploring their every whimsical interest (and, in some corners, wallowing in porn and racist memes), and Reddit as new-media juggernaut that struggles to profit off its users' activity in part by muzzling its less presentable voices. Despite Reddit's potential as a case study in the clash between cultural values and business values on the internet, Lagorio-Chafkin's bloated narrative bogs down in turgid office politics as Reddit cycles through staffers and CEOs with little growth beyond the swelling site traffic. The resulting soap opera about corporate nerds isn't convincing enough to hold attention.