This Is How They Tell Me the World Ends tells the chilling story of the most important new those that exist within computer code and that can unleash destruction on a mass scale like never before. The proliferation of cyberweapons could destroy more than just world data, and yet even as governments fear this new threat, they are racing to acquire these weapons for themselves. Quoting extensively from interviews with hackers, spies, arms dealers, and other key figures, the author tells an astonishing story about the dangers we face from our own innovation.
“Putin laid down only two rules for Russia’s hackers. First, no hacking inside the motherland. And second, when the Kremlin calls in a favor, you do whatever it asks. Otherwise, hackers had full autonomy. And oh, how Putin loved them.” ― Nicole Perlroth.
Disclaimer
This summary is meant to enhance your reading experience. The insights, analysis, and overall essence is unofficial work and not the original book. It is not intended as a substitute for the original work it summarizes. It is not licensed, approved, authorized, or endorsed by the original author or publisher.
Language
English
Pages
33
Format
Paperback
Release
March 15, 2022
ISBN 13
9798433229143
Summary of Nicole Perlroth's Book: This Is How They Tell Me the World Ends: The Cyberweapons Arms Race
This Is How They Tell Me the World Ends tells the chilling story of the most important new those that exist within computer code and that can unleash destruction on a mass scale like never before. The proliferation of cyberweapons could destroy more than just world data, and yet even as governments fear this new threat, they are racing to acquire these weapons for themselves. Quoting extensively from interviews with hackers, spies, arms dealers, and other key figures, the author tells an astonishing story about the dangers we face from our own innovation.
“Putin laid down only two rules for Russia’s hackers. First, no hacking inside the motherland. And second, when the Kremlin calls in a favor, you do whatever it asks. Otherwise, hackers had full autonomy. And oh, how Putin loved them.” ― Nicole Perlroth.
Disclaimer
This summary is meant to enhance your reading experience. The insights, analysis, and overall essence is unofficial work and not the original book. It is not intended as a substitute for the original work it summarizes. It is not licensed, approved, authorized, or endorsed by the original author or publisher.