We Are Anonymous—entertaining though necessarily a bit dumbed-down discussion of the Anonymous/LulzSec hacks. In this genre, I prefered The Hacker Crackdown or Mitnick’s Ghost in the wires, but it was interesting to see where the ‘Anonymous’ hackers came from, where they succeeded, and how they got caught.
Miller’s Spent—sex, evolution and consumer behavior which was recommend to me here, and discusses EvoPsy / consumerism. Overall, an interesting book, until the last few chapters where the author unsuccesfully attempts to show how to overcome consumerism.
Linden’s The Accidental Mind was a particularly insightful pop-sci discussion of how our brain works, with an emphasis on how buggy/imperfect it is, and how the brain works around that.
Some other books that I liked: Shell’s Bargaining for advantage (pretty good book about, well, bargaining, which presents the subject in a structured, non-BS way). If finally read Cialdini’s Influence (it was a bit anecdotical for my taste, but it’s a pretty good overview of the little tricks people use to influence others)
Some of the books I read recently:
We Are Anonymous—entertaining though necessarily a bit dumbed-down discussion of the Anonymous/LulzSec hacks. In this genre, I prefered The Hacker Crackdown or Mitnick’s Ghost in the wires, but it was interesting to see where the ‘Anonymous’ hackers came from, where they succeeded, and how they got caught.
Miller’s Spent—sex, evolution and consumer behavior which was recommend to me here, and discusses EvoPsy / consumerism. Overall, an interesting book, until the last few chapters where the author unsuccesfully attempts to show how to overcome consumerism.
Linden’s The Accidental Mind was a particularly insightful pop-sci discussion of how our brain works, with an emphasis on how buggy/imperfect it is, and how the brain works around that.
Some other books that I liked: Shell’s Bargaining for advantage (pretty good book about, well, bargaining, which presents the subject in a structured, non-BS way). If finally read Cialdini’s Influence (it was a bit anecdotical for my taste, but it’s a pretty good overview of the little tricks people use to influence others)
I personally found the research in Influence rather lacking and thought Cialdini speculated too much. But chapter 3 of the book is dead on.