Crash Override: How Gamergate (Nearly) Destroyed My Life, and How We Can Win the Fight Against Online Hate
Crash Override: How Gamergate (Nearly) Destroyed My Life, and How We Can Win the Fight Against Online Hate book cover

Crash Override: How Gamergate (Nearly) Destroyed My Life, and How We Can Win the Fight Against Online Hate

Kindle Edition

Price
$14.99
Publisher
PublicAffairs
Publication Date

Description

"A worthwhile read for anyone interested in taking action against the realities-and devastating effects-of extreme internet trolling...an informative and inspiring book."― Kirkus Reviews "I tore through this book. Zoe Quinn doesn't just present a clear-eyed examination of the internet's endemic sickness (though she does that beautifully), she contextualizes her personal nightmare within our current national one. It's a gripping read with historical merit."― Lindy West, author of Shrill "We finally have a chance to hear what we've been eagerly awaiting: Zoe's real story in her own words. If you've been harassed, depressed, lonely, or lost, her story will inspire and empower you. After all of it, she still finds a way to be optimistic and a force for positive change. She gives me hope for humanity and the future of technology."― Ellen Pao , former CEO of Reddit, co-founder of Project Include "At every turn, Zoe Quinn was utterly failed by the law enforcement agencies she counted on to protect her, and the social media companies that enabled her attackers. But she never gave up, refused to be a victim, and has used her experience to help countless victims of online stalking and harassment protect themselves. And she does it all with disarming humor and bracing honesty."― Wil Wheaton , actor, producer, author "Zoe Quinn captures the irrational contours of the #gamergate experience in vivid detail and offers a compelling personal history of the woman with a bullseye on her back."― Anita Sarkeesian , founder of Feminist Frequency "As the first target of the so-called #gamergate movement, and someone who fought it and won, Zoe Quinn is uniquely qualified to write this story. Think of this as Jon Ronson's So You've Been Publicly Shamed written from inside the eye of the storm."― Graham Linehan , writer and director of The IT Crowd "Part memoir, part social movement manifesto, this engrossing journey by game designer Quinn takes readers into the darkest realms of social media and the Internet.... An important purchase that will interest social media users and enlighten them about the extent of online hate in some social platforms and the limits on personal and social protections available in society today."― Library Journal "Quinn uses her personal experiences to advocate practical steps toward creating a safe and open internet culture.... For Quinn, winning the 'cultural battle for the web' starts with reframing the issue as not a matter of good vs. bad people fueling hate culture on the internet, but rather 'acceptable and unacceptable ways to treat each other.' It's a remarkably clear-eyed view that's all the more powerful in light of Quinn's backstory."― Publisher's Weekly , starred review "The overwhelming message of Crash Override resonates across industries and experiences: When someone disagrees with you on the internet, you shouldn't have to go into hiding."― Latoya Peterson , NPR.org " Crash Override combines a brisk pace, candid stories, and embedded insight. Quinn's first book has its uneven moments, but it's important stuff for anybody interested in how online discourse has shifted over the past two decades."― Ars Technica --This text refers to an alternate kindle_edition edition. A Simon & Schuster author. --This text refers to the hardcover edition.

Features & Highlights

  • You've heard the stories about the dark side of the internet -- hackers, #gamergate, anonymous mobs attacking an unlucky victim, and revenge porn -- but they remain just that: stories. Surely these things would never happen to you.
  • Zoe Quinn used to feel the same way. She is a video game developer whose ex-boyfriend published a crazed blog post cobbled together from private information, half-truths, and outright fictions, along with a rallying cry to the online hordes to go after her. They answered in the form of a so-called movement known as #gamergate--they hacked her accounts; stole nude photos of her; harassed her family, friends, and colleagues; and threatened to rape and murder her. But instead of shrinking into silence as the online mobs wanted her to, she raised her voice and spoke out against this vicious online culture and for making the internet a safer place for everyone. In the years since #gamergate, Quinn has helped thousands of people with her advocacy and online-abuse crisis resource Crash Override Network. From locking down victims' personal accounts to working with tech companies and lawmakers to inform policy, she has firsthand knowledge about every angle of online abuse, what powerful institutions are (and aren't) doing about it, and how we can protect our digital spaces and selves.
  • Crash Override
  • offers an up-close look inside the controversy, threats, and social and cultural battles that started in the far corners of the internet and have since permeated our online lives. Through her story -- as target and as activist -- Quinn provides a human look at the ways the internet impacts our lives and culture, along with practical advice for keeping yourself and others safe online.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(301)
★★★★
25%
(125)
★★★
15%
(75)
★★
7%
(35)
-7%
(-35)

Most Helpful Reviews

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One Star

Oppression Quest: The novel
162 people found this helpful
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Very poorly written

There is much to be said about the topic of this book and none of it can fit into this little box. But lets for a moment go back to the basics: the quality of the writing. This is a very poorly written book. In fact the writing is so poor, disjointed and scrambled it makes me think it has never seen an editor. It's an insult to her readers to publish such a mess. At the very least her publisher had the responsibility to edit this train wreck before publishing it so it's halfway readable.
147 people found this helpful
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It was pretty much what I thought it was going to be.

I'm going to be upfront about this I was following the Gamergate fiasco a few years ago. That said I shall proceed on with my thoughts on Crash Override.

First off the book itself. It's poor. Poorly written and poorly edited. It's all over the place from a narrative standpoint jumping around from event to event, it's almost like it has a problem with trying to finish a thought. Events in the book are either misrepresented or outlandishly embellished to make Quinn seem more relevant to everything around the movement than what she really was.

The narrative path the book takes isn't what I would say, on par with reality. Facts of the matter are, after the tipping point she was no longer relevant since the entire Gamergate movement was about ethics in gaming journalism, i.e. a consumer advocacy movement if you will.

As far it goes if you're buying this book to get an idea of what Gamergate was, this isn't going to help. If you're just looking for her side of the story you'll get it with a healthy helping of pure exaggeration. Those that haven't been following the movement since day one will have little bearing on the order of events that transpired and that is what she is hoping for with the publishing this, quite frankly, work of fiction.

As far as I'm concerned with the amount of hate she got online. Just remember she rode that wave all the way to the bank. She is successful because of this. Whenever her relevancy started to diminish she made it a point to jump back into the spotlight and become a focal point for the hate that actually was only a small contingent of the GG movement. Does anybody deserve online hate, no. You also shouldn't stand under the hive with a stick and not expect to be stung either.

If you're curious go ahead, just not at full price
143 people found this helpful
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Just don't. Unless it's a gift for someone you hate.

Oh man...words cannot express what happened to me after reading this. The Crash Override "Cleanse". If you are someone that can tolerate the fact substitute, enjoy. If you are like the dozens of people that tried my order, RUN!

First of all, for fiction I would rate this a 5. So good. Soft, true-to-fantasy fruit flavor like the genre variety...I was a happy camper.

BUT (or should I say BUTT), not long after reading about 20 pages of this all hell broke loose. I had a gastrointestinal experience like nothing I've ever imagined. Cramps, sweating, bloating beyond my worst nightmare. I've had food poisoning from some bad shellfish and that was almost like a skip in the park compared to what was going on inside me.

Then came the, uh, flatulence. Heavens to Murgatroyd, the sounds, like trumpets calling the demons back to Hell...the stench, like 1,000 rotten corpses vomited. I couldn't stand to stay in one room for fear of succumbing to my own odors.

But wait; there's more. What came out of me felt like someone tried to funnel Niagara Falls through a coffee straw. I swear my sphincters were screaming. It felt like my delicate starfish was a gaping maw projectile vomiting a torrential flood of toxic waste. 100% liquid. Flammable liquid. NAPALM. It was actually a bit humorous (for a nanosecond)as it was just beyond anything I could imagine possible.

AND IT WENT ON FOR HOURS.

I felt violated when it was over, which I think might have been sometime in the early morning of the next day. There was stuff coming out of me that I ate at my wedding in 2005.

I had HUNDREDS of these innocent-looking delicious-tasting HELLPAGES so I told a friend about what happened to me, thinking it HAD to be some type of sensitivity I had to the sour prostitute, and in spite of my warnings and graphic descriptions, she decided to take her chances and take it off my hands.

Silly woman. All of the same for her, and a phone call from her while on the toilet (because you kinda end up living in the bathroom for a spell) telling me she really wished she would have listened. I think she was crying.

Her sister was skeptical and suspected that we were exaggerating. She took it to work, since there was still 99% of a book left. She works for a construction company, where there are builders, roofers, house painters, landscapers, etc. Lots of people who generally have limited access to toilets on a given day. I can't imagine where all of those poor men (and women) pooped that day. I keep envisioning men on roofs, crossing their legs and trying to decide if they can make it down the ladder, or if they should just jump.

If you order this, best of luck to you. And please, don't post a video review during the aftershocks.
139 people found this helpful
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The 1-star reviews prove how important this book is!

Given that the massive onslaught of fraudulent/unverified 1-star reviews for this book are literally the perfect example of the hell Zoe's endured, it really lends a lot of credibility to her account, and firmly establishes her as an expert in dealing with online harassment and sexism in the tech and gaming communities.

And honestly, those 1-star reviews say so much more about why this book is important than this 5-star review ever could. If this weren't a big deal, nobody would've bothered pouring that much hate into this book's reviews. But they did, because what she's saying is such a huge threat to the foundation of toxic masculinity which fundamentally fuels Gamergate, and a lot of harassment in general.

Voices like Zoe's are so often forced into silence through threats and actual harm/damage, and in new ways (e.g. doxxing) than our criminal justice system and investigative agencies are equipped to handle. It's so important to support her, because this war clearly isn't even close to over, and Zoe is showing us how to fight back.
133 people found this helpful
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Sad!

Astro-turfed on day 1 of release. Sad!
132 people found this helpful
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it is funny, and it is accurate

This book does not retell a single event from the perspective of the victim. It dives into the legal, technological, economic and practical mechanics of abuse. It is clear, it is funny, and it is accurate. It starts off despairing but ends full of hope. I can not recommend it enough and will be buying a physical copy to keep as a reference.
123 people found this helpful
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One Star

This book was clearly ghost written, just compare the pages to her own writing! Shameful!
119 people found this helpful
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A much anticipated book!

If I was being charitable I'd say it's by a controversial person, but it's more accurate to say hated by large swathes of the internet. For a lark, read some of the 1 star reviews - hordes of people too afraid to actually engage with a person, refusing to read even a sample for fear that it contains some insidious memetic mind poison (otherwise known as, y'know, actual human decency).

Controversy aside, if you have any interest in the topic of harassment in the current age - like, even if you're an actual Nazi being hounded by anti-fascists on whatever social media platform you lurk in - it'll at least have some useful information. As for myself, I thoroughly enjoyed it - it's fashionably informal, depressing yet hopeful, and flows pretty well. I look forward to future works.
118 people found this helpful
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As dishonest as you would probably suspect it to be.

An unsurprisingly dishonest and self serving text that is an instruction manual on self delusion and obfuscation, that relies on readers believing everything anecdotally, and, apparently, operating under the assumption that no one would bother to fact check any of the content.
86 people found this helpful