News in the Category "Book Reviews"

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Kirkus Review of Data and Goliath

  • Kirkus Reviews
  • January 22, 2015

A jeremiad suggesting our addiction to data may have made privacy obsolete.

Prolific technological writer Schneier (Fellow/Berkman Center for Internet and Society, Harvard Law School; Carry On: Sound Advice from Schneier on Security, 2013, etc.) clearly examines how technology has transformed every interaction, noting how our intimate communications are now “saved in ways we have no control over.” He suggests that most Americans remain unconcerned about the relationship between data and surveillance, due to the attraction of “free” products like Gmail. He focuses on the social costs of surveillance, which “puts us at risk of abuses by those in power—exacerbated by the fact that we are generating so much data and storing it indefinitely.” He also argues that this “pervasive mass surveillance” will inevitably chill progressive movements—e.g., gay rights and cannabis decriminalization. The problem is more sprawling than most realize: Edward Snowden’s revelations clarified “how much the NSA relies on US corporations to eavesdrop on the Internet,” and corporations are using such technologies for their own ends. Yet both the NSA and corporations are blithe about how they treat the fruits of this nonstop spying. “From the military’s perspective,” writes the author, “it’s not surveillance until a human being looks at the data.” Such strange pronouncements about the common good are hard to counter, since whistleblowers such as Snowden are prohibited from explaining their actions in court. Schneier argues that all this invasion of privacy is unlikely to succeed in its alleged goal: “Even highly accurate terrorism prediction systems will be so flooded with false alarms that they will be useless.” He concludes this grim catalog of privacy erosion with a set of prescriptions for governments, corporations and “the rest of us,” advocating a mix of legal framework, incentives for fairer business models and a more realistic understanding of the current moment’s potential for harm…

Liars & Outliers—an Enjoyable & Thoughtful Read

  • Ben Spaulding
  • October 1, 2014

In February of 2012 the venerable Bruce Schneier published yet another book, Liars & Outliers. It was a book that I really wanted to read, but at the time was lacking both funds and the time.

Some months later he posted an offer to his blog: buy the book cheap if you promise to post a review. Impulsively, I jumped on it. Save some money, get a great book, and it comes with a little pressure to read it quickly and get a review up; that sounded like just the deal I needed!

I’m embarrassed to say that was over two years ago. While I had started reading the book immediately, it was not until last month that I set a firm goal to read it and finally completed the book. I regret not having done that earlier because …

Carry On: Sound Advice from Schneier on Security (Review)

  • Ben Rothke
  • RSA Conference Blog
  • August 11, 2014

Bruce Schneier has been called an information security rock star. If that’s the case, then Carry On: Sound Advice from Schneier on Security is his greatest hits collection 2008-2013.

The roughly 175 essays in the book represent a collection of articles Schneier wrote for this Crypto-Gram newsletter, his blog and other blogs, magazines, newspapers and other periodicals.

Some of the articles, such as the 2008 piece “Chinese Cyberattacks: Myth or Menace?” are clearly dated. A number of the other articles are somewhat redundant in that they were written on the same topic for different audiences…

Book Review: Bruce Schneier, Liars and Outliers

  • Tony Doyle
  • Journal of Value Inquiry
  • March 2014

Trust is all around us. I trust drivers to wait at the red light while I cross the street, my doctor to base his diagnosis on the best available evidence, and my neighbor not to crack me over the head and swipe my wallet and phone as we ride the elevator together. In Liars and Outliers Bruce Schneier attempts to make rigorous the intuition that trust is the foundation of the remarkable degree of cooperation that characterizes successful societies. He makes his case in the context of social contract theory, game theory, behavioral economics, and moral, social, and evolutionary psychology. There is a lot in …

Liars and Outliers Review

  • George Macon
  • By George!
  • October 30, 2013

I’ve just finished reading Liars and Outliers by Bruce Schneier. I received a signed copy thanks to Schneier’s discounted signed book offer of $11 plus a review. So here’s a review:

In this book, Schneier takes on all of security: What is it, and why does it work? The answer flows through diverse areas of study, from evolutionary psychology to game theory. He begins (appropriately enough) with history; a discussion of predators and prey. From microbiology, we move rapidly forward through time to modern society.

After taking a look at history, Schneier moves into a discussion of the four societal pressures: moral, reputational, institutional, and security. Each kind of pressure is built off of the previous ones, with security being the most advanced…

Applied Cryptography by Bruce Schneier

  • Russ Allbery
  • October 23, 2013

This is the next entry in the series of Russ reading books that he bought years ago and never got around to reading. Thankfully, this time, the book has aged somewhat better.

This review is for the second edition of Applied Cryptography, published in 1996. Given how important computer security has become, and how central cryptography is to computer security, one might think that the passage of 17 years would make a book effectively obsolete. This turns out not to be the case. Yes, Rijndael (the current AES standard and the most widely-used block cipher), Camellia (the up-and-comer in the block cipher world), and the SHA-2 hash postdate this book and aren’t discussed. Yes, there have been some further developments in elliptic-curve public-key cryptography. And yes, much of the political information in this book, as well as the patent situation for public-key cryptosystems, is now mostly of historical interest. But a surprising amount of this book still applies directly…

Отзыв о книге Брюса Шнайера «Liars and Outliers»

  • qq
  • Заметки в консоли
  • July 31, 2013

Примерно год назад (в августе 2012 года) в блоге Брюса Шнайера (Bruce Schneier) «Schneier on Security» появилось сообщение о том, что он рассылает некоторое количество экземпляров своей новой книги «Liars and Outliers: Enabling the Trust that Society Needs to Thrive» [1] по сниженной цене (и с личной подписью) в обмен на публикацию отзыва об этой книге после прочтения. По причине того, что в последнее время переводы нехудожественных книг на русский язык достаточно посредственны, да и «специфические» книги переводятся у нас не очень скоро, уже несколько лет я стараюсь читать оригиналы книг (бумажные или электронные), изданных на английском языке. Данный блог (рассылку «Crypto-Gram») и предыдущие книги были мне интересны, поэтому учитывая то, что цена с учётом доставки, оказалась достаточно привлекательной (по сравнению с доставкой с Amazon, про цены на оригиналы на Озоне я даже не говорю), я заказал экземпляр у Брюса Шнайера. Благодаря нашей почте, книгу я получил только в начале ноября. Из-за проблем со свободным временем чтение и составление отзыва пришлось отложить на новогодние праздники, а затем и до отпуска. Несколько дней назад я прочитал книгу и теперь выполняю своё обещание. Приношу свои извинения Брюсу Шнайеру за столь длительную задержку…

Applied Cryptography Engineering

  • Thomas Ptacek
  • Sockpuppet.org
  • July 22, 2013

If you’re reading this, you’re probably a red-blooded American programmer with a simmering interest in cryptography. And my guess is your interest came from Bruce Schneier’s Applied Cryptography.

Applied Cryptography is a deservedly famous book that lies somewhere between survey, pop-sci advocacy, and almanac. It taught two generations of software developers everything they know about crypto. It’s literate, readable, and ambitious. What’s not to love?

Just this: as an instruction manual, Applied Cryptography is dreadful. Even Schneier seems to concede the point…

Book Review: Schneier on Security

  • kuppurao
  • Cerebrate Life
  • July 19, 2013

I had long ago listened to Schneier on TED and his expose on the fallacy of airport security, and security in general. But this book made me realize his activism is not limited to airport security—he talks on a broad range of topics including the privacy, government transparency (where it kinda didn’t sit well with me) and his advocacy around the how bad a job the US government in general, and organizations such as FBI, CIA and TSA in specific with respect to protecting its citizens. Here I do want to make a point—while his concepts are certainly global, his inferences are time and again to the Americans—whether due to the fact that most of the readers would anyways be Americans, or he views the world as “Americans and others”, I am not sure. Overall it is a decent read, but if I were to summarize his points into few bullet points, they are as follows:…

Secrets and Lies: Nine Years Later

  • Joe Zack
  • JoeZack.com
  • July 14, 2013

UPDATE: Just found out that most of the book was actually copyright 2000, even more impressive!

I just finished reading Secrets and Lies: Digital Security in a Networked World and wanted to write up some of my thoughts while it was still fresh in my mind. The book was published in early 2004, hundreds of years ago in tech-time. However I was really surprised at just how pertinent it still is.

This book was written before Stuxnet, before the PRISM scandal…heck, the book was written BEFORE FACEBOOK, yet after reading Secrets and Lies I feel like Bruce Schneier saw them coming from a decade away. Like a Digital Nostradamus…

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Sidebar photo of Bruce Schneier by Joe MacInnis.