The end of the Silicon Valley insider–critic

“We have a generation of ‘veteran tech critics’ with ties to the industry they comment on.”

Ten years ago, it was relatively difficult to find critical coverage of Google, Facebook, Amazon, and other companies in the tech sector — it was hard to find any critical tech coverage. Stories like Edward Snowden’s NSA disclosures and the Cambridge Analytica scandal led to ramped-up journalism resources and attention, and in many cases, reporters staffed full-time on the tech beat, but before then, legacy media regarded Silicon Valley as a niche concern. Anything related to tech was significantly underreported despite the scale and influence of the industry that was only growing.

If you wanted to read about a new feature that Facebook implemented in 2011, you might have ended up on the blog of someone who worked in the tech industry — perhaps even the blog of someone who worked at Facebook and on that product. In the absence of professional journalists covering tech, there was independent media like blogs and newsletters to fill the gap.

Consequently, we have a generation of “veteran tech critics” with ties to the industry they comment on. These could be academics with fellowships funded by Microsoft or employees at Google who spoke critically about Facebook’s privacy issues at tech conferences around the globe. The sheen of expertise that experience inside these major companies might have conveyed before is dimming as the wider public begins to recognize that the problems Silicon Valley companies inflict on society are not new, but problems that rooted in their very inception. There were people organizing Google bus protests in 2013. Why should we listen to the people who were inside the buses then, if they’ve had a change of heart, and are now more politically aligned with the protesters they ignored before?

The belief in a tech insider as a tech expert is what led The New York Times to publish Nick Clegg’s op-ed in 2019, “Breaking up Facebook is not the answer.” Clegg is Facebook’s VP of global affairs, and his is an outrageously unpopular position that perhaps only one other person on earth could argue with full conviction (Mark Zuckerberg). Likewise, the Silicon Valley whistleblower-to-Aspen Ideas Festival pipeline that Frances Haugen has staked looks increasingly like a cynical face-saving measure post-“techlash.”

But now there is a deep bench of reporters and commentators with expertise in the tech industry who have never taken Silicon Valley money. These are the real experts.

Ten years ago, it was relatively difficult to find critical coverage of Google, Facebook, Amazon, and other companies in the tech sector — it was hard to find any critical tech coverage. Stories like Edward Snowden’s NSA disclosures and the Cambridge Analytica scandal led to ramped-up journalism resources and attention, and in many cases, reporters staffed full-time on the tech beat, but before then, legacy media regarded Silicon Valley as a niche concern. Anything related to tech was significantly underreported despite the scale and influence of the industry that was only growing.

If you wanted to read about a new feature that Facebook implemented in 2011, you might have ended up on the blog of someone who worked in the tech industry — perhaps even the blog of someone who worked at Facebook and on that product. In the absence of professional journalists covering tech, there was independent media like blogs and newsletters to fill the gap.

Consequently, we have a generation of “veteran tech critics” with ties to the industry they comment on. These could be academics with fellowships funded by Microsoft or employees at Google who spoke critically about Facebook’s privacy issues at tech conferences around the globe. The sheen of expertise that experience inside these major companies might have conveyed before is dimming as the wider public begins to recognize that the problems Silicon Valley companies inflict on society are not new, but problems that rooted in their very inception. There were people organizing Google bus protests in 2013. Why should we listen to the people who were inside the buses then, if they’ve had a change of heart, and are now more politically aligned with the protesters they ignored before?

The belief in a tech insider as a tech expert is what led The New York Times to publish Nick Clegg’s op-ed in 2019, “Breaking up Facebook is not the answer.” Clegg is Facebook’s VP of global affairs, and his is an outrageously unpopular position that perhaps only one other person on earth could argue with full conviction (Mark Zuckerberg). Likewise, the Silicon Valley whistleblower-to-Aspen Ideas Festival pipeline that Frances Haugen has staked looks increasingly like a cynical face-saving measure post-“techlash.”

But now there is a deep bench of reporters and commentators with expertise in the tech industry who have never taken Silicon Valley money. These are the real experts.

Shannon McGregor & Carolyn Schmitt

Meena Thiruvengadam

Amy Schmitz Weiss

Julia Angwin

Christina Shih

Candace Amos

Chase Davis

Andrew Freedman

Paul Cheung

James Green

Mario García

Matthew Pressman

Robert Hernandez

Cherian George

Simon Galperin

Joy Mayer

Ariel Zirulnick

Tamar Charney

Brian Moritz

Megan McCarthy

Anika Anand

AX Mina

Tony Baranowski

Amara Aguilar

Francesco Zaffarano

Chicas Poderosas

Zizi Papacharissi

Natalia Viana

Burt Herman

Anita Varma

Rachel Glickhouse

Millie Tran

Jesse Holcomb

Victor Pickard

Moreno Cruz Osório

Mary Walter-Brown

Sarah Stonbely

Christoph Mergerson

Kerri Hoffman

Catalina Albeanu

Raney Aronson-Rath

Jennifer Coogan

Alice Antheaume

Rasmus Kleis Nielsen

John Davidow

Laxmi Parthasarathy

Kathleen Searles & Rebekah Trumble

Jesenia De Moya Correa

Gordon Crovitz

Nikki Usher

Doris Truong

Simon Allison

Daniel Eilemberg

Don Day

Eric Nuzum

Jessica Clark

David Skok

Joanne McNeil

Tom Trewinnard

Kendra Pierre-Louis

Jennifer Brandel

Anthony Nadler

Kristen Jeffers

Julia Munslow

Joe Amditis

Gonzalo del Peon

Kristen Muller

Matt Karolian

Joshua P. Darr

j. Siguru Wahutu

Whitney Phillips

Richard Tofel

Izabella Kaminska

Sarah Marshall

Parker Molloy

James Salanga

Ståle Grut

Larry Ryckman

Mike Rispoli

Wilson Liévano

Shalabh Upadhyay

Mandy Jenkins

Matt DeRienzo

Stefanie Murray

David Cohn

Michael W. Wagner

Jody Brannon

Sam Guzik

Gabe Schneider

Errin Haines

Joni Deutsch

Jonas Kaiser

Cristina Tardáguila

Cindy Royal

S. Mitra Kalita

Juleyka Lantigua

Stephen Fowler

A.J. Bauer

Jim Friedlich

Melody Kramer