The New Digital Age: Reshaping the Future of People, Nations and Business
February 4, 2013
- Author:
- Eric Schmidt, Jared Cohen
- Publisher:
- Knopf (4/23/2013)
In an unparalleled collaboration, two leading global thinkers in technology and foreign affairs give us their widely anticipated, transformational vision of the future: a world where everyone is connected—a world full of challenges and benefits that are ours to meet and to harness.
Eric Schmidt is one of Silicon Valley’s great leaders, having taken Google from a small startup to one of the world’s most influential companies. Jared Cohen is the director of Google Ideas and a former adviser to secretaries of state Condoleezza Rice and Hillary Clinton. With their combined knowledge and experiences, the authors are uniquely positioned to take on some of the toughest questions about our future: Who will be more powerful in the future, the citizen or the state? Will technology make terrorism easier or harder to carry out? What is the relationship between privacy and security, and how much will we have to give up to be part of the new digital age?
In this groundbreaking book, Schmidt and Cohen combine observation and insight to outline the promise and peril awaiting us in the coming decades. At once pragmatic and inspirational, this is a forward-thinking account of where our world is headed and what this means for people, states and businesses.
With the confidence and clarity of visionaries, Schmidt and Cohen illustrate just how much we have to look forward to—and beware of—as the greatest information and technology revolution in human history continues to evolve. On individual, community and state levels, across every geographical and socioeconomic spectrum, they reveal the dramatic developments—good and bad—that will transform both our everyday lives and our understanding of self and society, as technology advances and our virtual identities become more and more fundamentally real.
As Schmidt and Cohen’s nuanced vision of the near future unfolds, an urban professional takes his driverless car to work, attends meetings via hologram and dispenses housekeeping robots by voice; a Congolese fisherwoman uses her smart phone to monitor market demand and coordinate sales (saving on costly refrigeration and preventing overfishing); the potential arises for “virtual statehood” and “Internet asylum” to liberate political dissidents and oppressed minorities, but also for tech-savvy autocracies (and perhaps democracies) to exploit their citizens’ mobile devices for ever more ubiquitous surveillance. Along the way, we meet a cadre of international figures—including Julian Assange—who explain their own visions of our technology-saturated future.
Inspiring, provocative and absorbing, The New Digital Age is a brilliant analysis of how our hyper-connected world will soon look, from two of our most prescient and informed public thinkers.
Kindle version also available at this link

Comments (5)
by Peter Kinnon
As is the almost universal practice in such discussions, the greater evolutionary picture which strongly indicates the emergence of a new predominant cognitive entity from what is at present the Internet is ignored.
The avoidance of this other inconvenient truth effected by burying of heads in sand in favor of more comfy-cozy anthropocentric conceits.
The argument uncomfortably discounting the notion of humankind in some way being the be-all and end-a ll of nature’s machinery is presented very informally in the free e-book download “The Goldilocks Effect: What Has Serendipity Ever Done For Us?” . A more formal and detailed treatment, “The Intricacy Generator: Pushing Chemistry Uphill” is in preparation.
by Dan Robinson
Let’s hope the Singularity advances faster than the Homo Sapiens infection, of our planet. Otherwise, Gore’s “one issue” will be the only one we should be talking about, unless we’re thinking about starting a Mars colony.
Have you heard about Richard Heinberg’s popular question, “Are we smarter than yeast” in their own finite world of a sealed wine cask, where they consume and pollute themselves to death? Or is our pollution somehow of value to some more advanced being, as with the yeast?
by richiemobile
Along with this book, another good book to read is Al Gore’s new book.
“The Future, Six Drivers of Global change” , Gore has been “pigeonholed”mistakenly by the collective media-mind as a
one issue environmentalist post-political person. They (we) forget
that he spent 8 years as Vice President. His insights are invaluable and collaborative to Schmidt & Cohen’s book.
by steve
No mention of structural unemployment and economic upheaval?
by high carbfoods
The review points some benefits of this approach of prediction. Digital Age, unless the economic benefits outweigh, developing countries won’t be able to plunge into this. Inspiration is good at the Church podium, but will it alter the destiny of global economy?