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A carregar... Going Zero: A Novel (original 2023; edição 2023)por Anthony McCarten (Autor)
Informação Sobre a ObraGoing Zero: A Novel por Anthony McCarten (2023)
A carregar...
Adira ao LibraryThing para descobrir se irá gostar deste livro. Ainda não há conversas na Discussão sobre este livro. I would have given a higher rating when I first started this book but I get quite annoyed when authors and editors can't be bothered to check assumptions, such as the existence of a backwoods border crossing to the U.S. from Canada near Hamilton, Ontario. (The border between Ontario and the U.S. is almost entirely on bodies of water.) ( ) Anthony McCarten is so successful as a screenwriter that it is no surprise when he writes a novel that seems like raw material for a screenplay. Genre doesn’t seem to matter to him. His films include works as different as Darkest Hour, Bohemian Rhapsody, The Two Popes, and The Theory of Everything, and his novel, Going Zero, is something different yet. It is a tech thriller about surveillance and big data used to track suspects. A software company wants to sell its products to Homeland Security and the CIA, so it hires ten people with diverse backgrounds to try to evade its predictive software for a month. The action moves back and forth between the hunters and the hunted, and all the characters have complex motives. Even Cy, the surveillance software developer, tells himself that he is doing the right thing in building tools to destroy privacy. He says, “People don’t want privacy, not anymore. Privacy is passé. Privacy is a prison. People can’t wait to give it away, if you really want to know the truth. The fact is, they’re so damn lonely … that they barter away their privacy with relief, first chance they get.” He goes on to argue that loneliness makes people “crave to be watched,” so being spied on becomes a pleasure. Intriguing premise + snappy writing = Four star book! Yay. What satisfaction to find one that's not hyped yet (recommended by the NYT no less) and so one is free to go in with pure expectations. Now let me add that Going Zero is written by a screenwriting heavweight. No wonder I soon began to sense a moviemaking influence in its pacing and character exploration. When we begin, social media giant Fusion has selected 10 contestants for a very interesting challenge: Go underground, remaining unfound for 30 days, while we use all the might of the billions of pieces of data we've mined on you, surveillance technology, and plain old digital snooping to hunt you down. If you succeed we give you 3 million dollars, tax free. The stated premise behind all this is noble: protect the country (USA, who else) from any imaginable threat. And the contention is that citizens willingly give up their data, their right to privacy. Private entities have long managed and manipulated these vast data banks, so why not use it all for the national good? So says Cy Baxter, Fusion founder, along with Erika Coogan, his right hand. So far, so so good, as the ten contestants start getting captured by a truly breathtaking mix of techniques at Fusion's disposal. But then it emereges that one particular one, a seemingly low-profile librarian named Kaitlyn Day, has started leading Fusion on a clever, even playful, cat-and-mouse game. How come? Cy is intrigued even as other contestants keep getting captured. Now mind, the actual US government is also involved in all this, albeit in a slightly behind-the-scenes capacity. And as we follow the exploits of Kaitlyn the shadowy details begin to emerge. Why is she so able to evade capture? What role does the CIA actually play? Who is Warren Crewe? And what are the true motivations behind the Going Zero project? Dang, Anthony McCarten is good. I hear that this novel has already been snapped up for a movie, no surprise there. Meanwhile he has entertained me thoroughly, no easy feat these days seeing as I have turned into an authentic curmudgeon. Never mind. Dear Anthony and others of his ilk shall keep delivering surprises to my jaded soul and thus keep me on the sunny side of the street. On to the next! In this tense future thriller by Anthony McCarten, ten people attempt to ‘Go Zero’, by eluding a sophisticated computer system called FUSION for 30 days for the chance to win 3 million dollars in cash. Though it’s difficult to disappear in the age of electronic dependence, anyone determined enough can still manage it. Tech wunder-kind Cy Baxter has developed a program designed to close the loop holes, and if he can prove it works, he’ll earn a $90 billion-dollar contract from the CIA and revolutionise global surveillance. Among the contestants is Kaitlyn Day, for whom winning is everything. As FUSION locates one target after another, Cy’s frustration with the meek librarian’s ability to evade him grows while the clock ticks relentlessly down to Zero Day. Going Zero is a pacy read, with the tension building from the moment the competition begins. The ten contestants, who vary in age and background, use different methods to disappear but FUSION proves itself from the first, and within ten days, half of them have been found. I found the ways in which Cy’s team, with the help of FUSION, tracked their targets down to be interesting. While laws regarding access to, and the collation of, data currently provides individuals some protection, the information is available, and if it could be combined with aggressive surveillance, and behavioural and predictive analysis as it is with FUSION, few would be able to remain invisible. Kaitlyn’s ability to stay one step ahead of FUSION seems due to luck as much as planning at first. I was definitely cheering her on, especially after Cy dismissed her as ‘a book person’. A little suspension of belief is required at times In the story, but it’s part of the fun. Just as FUSION closes in on the last of the competitors, McCarten raises the stakes with a clever twist. Though I knew something was coming, the details were a surprise and I enjoyed the change of direction. If you’ve ever watched Hunted you’ll have an idea as to what expect from this novel. Going Zero is an undemanding and quick, but thoroughly entertaining read. sem críticas | adicionar uma crítica
Prémios
Fiction.
Suspense.
Thriller.
HTML: TWO HOURS TO VANISH. ONE CHANCE TO ESCAPE. ZERO ALTERNATIVES. Ten Americans have been carefully selected to Beta test a ground-breaking piece of spyware. FUSION can track anyone on earth. But does it work? For one contestant, an unassuming Boston librarian named Kaitlyn Day, the stakes are far higher than money, and her reasons for entering the test more personal than anyone imagines. When the timer hits zero, there will only be one winner... From four-time Academy Award-nominated screenwriter Anthony McCarten comes a breakneck, wickedly entertaining thriller for our times, a twisty, action-packed novel reminiscent of the best Michael Crichton technothrillers. .Não foram encontradas descrições de bibliotecas. |
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Google Books — A carregar... GénerosSistema Decimal de Melvil (DDC)823.914Literature English & Old English literatures English fiction Modern Period 1901-1999 1945-1999Classificação da Biblioteca do Congresso dos EUA (LCC)AvaliaçãoMédia:
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