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Podcast – Cory Doctorow's craphound.com

Podcast – Cory Doctorow's craphound.com

Cory Doctorow

Cory Doctorow's Literary Works

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Top 10 Podcast – Cory Doctorow's craphound.com Episodes

Goodpods has curated a list of the 10 best Podcast – Cory Doctorow's craphound.com episodes, ranked by the number of listens and likes each episode have garnered from our listeners. If you are listening to Podcast – Cory Doctorow's craphound.com for the first time, there's no better place to start than with one of these standout episodes. If you are a fan of the show, vote for your favorite Podcast – Cory Doctorow's craphound.com episode by adding your comments to the episode page.

Podcast – Cory Doctorow's craphound.com - The Internet Con: How to Seize the Means of Computation (audiobook outtake)
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08/01/23 • 55 min

This week’s podcast is a special one: the introduction and chapter one of the audio edition of The Internet Con: How To Seize the Means of Computation, which Verso will publish on September 5, 2023. I made my own DRM-free audiobook for this, reading it under the direction of the incredible Gabrielle de Cuir at Skyboat Media. You can pre-order DRM-free audiobooks, ebooks and hardcovers (both signed and unsigned) at my Kickstarter.

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Podcast – Cory Doctorow's craphound.com - The Canadian Miracle, Part 2

The Canadian Miracle, Part 2

Podcast – Cory Doctorow's craphound.com

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11/06/23 • 13 min

This week on my podcast, I read the second and final part of my short story, “The Canadian Miracle,” a story set in the world of my forthcoming pre-apocalyptic Green New Deal novel, The Lost Cause, which comes out on November 14.

Look for the helpers. You will always find people who are helping. -Fred Rogers, 1986

It’s a treat to beat your feet on the Mississippi Mud. -Bing Crosby, 1927.

I arrived in Oxford with the first wave of Blue Helmets, choppered in along with our gear, touching down on a hospital roof, both so that our doctors and nurses could get straight to work, and also because it was one of the few buildings left with a helipad and backup generators and its own water filtration.

Humping my bag down the stairs to the waterlogged ground levels was a nightmare, even by Calgary standards. People lay on the stairs, sick and injured, and navigating them without stepping on them was like an endless nightmare of near-falls and weak moans from people too weak to curse me. I met a nurse halfway down and she took my bag from me and set it down on the landing and gave me a warm hug. “Welcome,” she said, and looked deep into my eyes. We were both young and both women but she was Black and American and I was white and Canadian. I came from a country where, for the first time in a hundred years, there was a generation that wasn’t terrified of the future. She came from a country where everybody knew they had no future.

I hugged her back and she told me my lips were cracked and ordered me to drink water and watched me do it. “This lady’s with the Canadians. They came to help,” she said to her patients on the stairs. Some of them smiled and murmured at me. Others just stared at the back of their eyelids, reliving their traumas or tracing the contours of their pain.

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Podcast – Cory Doctorow's craphound.com - Microincentives and Enshittification

Microincentives and Enshittification

Podcast – Cory Doctorow's craphound.com

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10/23/23 • 16 min

This week on my podcast, I read a recent Medium column, “Microincentives and Enshittification” (open access link), about how Google went from being a company whose products were eerily good and whose corporate might was more often on the side of right than wrong, to being a company whose products are locked in a terminal enshittification spiral and whose lobbying might is firmly on the wrong side of history.

Let’s start with how hard it is to not use Google. Google spends fifty billion dollars per year on deals to be the default search engine for Apple, Samsung, Firefox and elsewhere. Google spends a whole-ass Twitter, every single year, just to make sure you never accidentally try another search engine.

Small wonder there are so few search alternatives — and small wonder that the most promising ones are suffocated for lack of market oxygen.

Google Search is as big as it could possibly be. The sub-ten-percent of the search market that Google doesn’t own isn’t ever going to voluntarily come into the Google fold. Those brave iconoclasts are intimately familiar with Google Search and have had to override one or more defaults in order to get shut of it. They aren’t customers-in-waiting who just need a little more persuading.

That means that Google Search can’t grow by adding new customers. It can only grow by squeezing its existing customers harder.

For Google Search to increase its profits, it must shift value from web publishers, advertisers and/or users to itself.

The only way for Google Search to grow is to make itself worse.

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Podcast – Cory Doctorow's craphound.com - All (Broadband) Politics Are Local

All (Broadband) Politics Are Local

Podcast – Cory Doctorow's craphound.com

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03/07/22 • 14 min

This week on my podcast, I read a recent Medium column, All (Broadband) Politics Are Local, about the near-miraculous shift in the political will to provide universal fiber to all Americans, and what you can do to spur this process on.

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Podcast – Cory Doctorow's craphound.com - Don’t Be Evil

Don’t Be Evil

Podcast – Cory Doctorow's craphound.com

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12/03/23 • 14 min

This week on my podcast, I read my Locus Magazine column “Don’t Be Evil,” about the microeconomics and moral injury of enshittification.

It’s tempting to think of the Great Enshittening – in which all the inter­net services we enjoyed and came to rely upon became suddenly and irreversibly terrible – as the result of moral decay. That is, it’s tempting to think that the people who gave us the old, good internet did so because they were good people, and the people who enshittified it did so because they are shitty people.

But the services that defined the old, good internet weren’t designed or maintained by individuals; they were created by institutions – mostly for-profit companies, but also non-profits, government and military agencies and academic and research facilities. Institutions are made up of individuals, of course, but the thing that makes an institution institutional is that no one person can direct it. The actions of an institution are the result of its many individual constituent parts, both acting in concert, and acting against one another.

In other words: institutional action is the result of its individuals resolving their conflicts. Institutional action is the net results of wheedling, horse-trading, solidarity, skullduggery, power-moves, trickery, coercion, rational argument, love, spite, ferocity, and indifference among the institution’s members.

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Podcast – Cory Doctorow's craphound.com - The Canadian Miracle, Part 1

The Canadian Miracle, Part 1

Podcast – Cory Doctorow's craphound.com

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11/01/23 • 25 min

This week on my podcast, I read part one of my short story, “The Canadian Miracle,” a story set in the world of my forthcoming pre-apocalyptic Green New Deal novel, The Lost Cause, which comes out on November 14.

Look for the helpers. You will always find people who are helping. -Fred Rogers, 1986

It’s a treat to beat your feet on the Mississippi Mud. -Bing Crosby, 1927.

I arrived in Oxford with the first wave of Blue Helmets, choppered in along with our gear, touching down on a hospital roof, both so that our doctors and nurses could get straight to work, and also because it was one of the few buildings left with a helipad and backup generators and its own water filtration.

Humping my bag down the stairs to the waterlogged ground levels was a nightmare, even by Calgary standards. People lay on the stairs, sick and injured, and navigating them without stepping on them was like an endless nightmare of near-falls and weak moans from people too weak to curse me. I met a nurse halfway down and she took my bag from me and set it down on the landing and gave me a warm hug. “Welcome,” she said, and looked deep into my eyes. We were both young and both women but she was Black and American and I was white and Canadian. I came from a country where, for the first time in a hundred years, there was a generation that wasn’t terrified of the future. She came from a country where everybody knew they had no future.

I hugged her back and she told me my lips were cracked and ordered me to drink water and watched me do it. “This lady’s with the Canadians. They came to help,” she said to her patients on the stairs. Some of them smiled and murmured at me. Others just stared at the back of their eyelids, reliving their traumas or tracing the contours of their pain.

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Podcast – Cory Doctorow's craphound.com - How To Think About Scraping

How To Think About Scraping

Podcast – Cory Doctorow's craphound.com

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09/24/23 • 22 min

This week on my podcast, I read a recent Medium column. “How To Think About Scraping: In privacy and labor fights, copyright is a clumsy tool at best,” about the real risks (and benefits) of web-scraping, and how to formulate policy responses that preserve those benefits while targeting the harms head-on”

Scraping when the scrapee suffers as a result of your scraping is good, actually.

Mario Zechner is an Austrian technologist who used the APIs of large grocery chains to prove that they were colluding to rig prices. Zechner was able to create a corpus of historical price and product data to show how grocers used a raft of deceptive practices to trick people into thinking they were getting a good deal, from shrinkflation to cyclic price changes that were deceptively billed as “discounts.”

At first, Zechner worked alone and in fear of reprisals from the giant corporations whose fraudulent practices — which affected every person in the country — he had revealed.

But eventually, he was able to get the Austrian bureaucrat in charge of enforcing competition rules to publish a report lauding his work. Zechner open-sourced his project and attracted volunteers who started pulling in data from Germany and Slovenia.

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(Image: syvwlch, CC BY 2.0, modified)

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Podcast – Cory Doctorow's craphound.com - We Should Not Endure a King

We Should Not Endure a King

Podcast – Cory Doctorow's craphound.com

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02/27/22 • 17 min

This week on my podcast, I read a recent Medium column, We Should Not Endure a King: Antitrust is a political cause, not an economic one, addressed to leftists who are skeptical of antitrust as a market-based solution that implictly accepts markets as the legitimate arbiter of our social relations.

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Podcast – Cory Doctorow's craphound.com - Vertically Challenged

Vertically Challenged

Podcast – Cory Doctorow's craphound.com

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03/13/22 • 15 min

This week on my podcast, I read my latest Locus column, Vertically Challenged, about “how and why to break up Big Tech.”

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(Image: Anthony Quintano; CC BY 2.0, modified; Paramount/Star Trek, modified)

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Podcast – Cory Doctorow's craphound.com - The Lost Cause (excerpt)

The Lost Cause (excerpt)

Podcast – Cory Doctorow's craphound.com

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10/12/23 • 122 min

This week on my podcast, I present the prologue and first chapter of The Lost Cause, my forthcoming solarpunk novel of Green New Deal world threatened by seagoing anarcho-capitalist billionaire wreckers and their white nationalist militia shock-troops. The book comes out on November 14 from Tor/Macmillan (US/Canada) and Head of Zeus/Bloomsbury (UK/Australia/NZ/SA, etc). As with all my books, I’ve had to produce my own audio edition, because Amazon refuses to carry my work in audio form. You can pre-order the DRM-free audio and ebook and the hardcover through my Kickstarter.

If you like my work and have ever wanted to say thank you, this is the best way to do so. These kickstarters don’t just pay my bills, they also provide the financial cushion that lets me produce all the free work I’ve done for decades, including this podcast. What’s more, they help me show other authors and the publishing world that when writers have their readers’ backs, readers will return the favor.

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FAQ

How many episodes does Podcast – Cory Doctorow's craphound.com have?

Podcast – Cory Doctorow's craphound.com currently has 69 episodes available.

What topics does Podcast – Cory Doctorow's craphound.com cover?

The podcast is about Stories, Podcasts, Books, Audiobook and Arts.

What is the most popular episode on Podcast – Cory Doctorow's craphound.com?

The episode title 'The Lost Cause (excerpt)' is the most popular.

What is the average episode length on Podcast – Cory Doctorow's craphound.com?

The average episode length on Podcast – Cory Doctorow's craphound.com is 25 minutes.

How often are episodes of Podcast – Cory Doctorow's craphound.com released?

Episodes of Podcast – Cory Doctorow's craphound.com are typically released every 11 days, 7 hours.

When was the first episode of Podcast – Cory Doctorow's craphound.com?

The first episode of Podcast – Cory Doctorow's craphound.com was released on Feb 27, 2022.

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