The New Age of Sexism: How Emerging Technologies Are Reinventing Misogyny
Laura Bates. Sourcebooks, $28.99 (336p) ISBN 978-1-4642-3436-1
Cyber-brothels staffed by sex dolls, submissive AI girlfriends, and deepfake porn are just some of the ways that new tech is being put to misogynistic use, according to this eye-popping exposé. Feminist activist Bates (Men Who Hate Women) shatters the “glittering promises of a shiny new-and-improved future society” by uncovering the lurid, sexist underbelly of recent advances in tech. Pinpointing the 2010s explosion of revenge porn as the forerunner of a new wave of online misogyny, she explores cutting-edge forms of abuse, subjugation, and discrimination, such as women being “virtually assaulted” in the metaverse, sex robots “designed to encourage their users to act out rape fantasies,” and AI recruitment tools that prefer male applicants. The book is partly a vibrant recounting of Bates’s own investigations, including a covert visit to “the first immersive cyber brothel in Europe” (where she felt “she stepped into a crime scene”). She also chillingly describes the panic attack–inducing experience of being sent deepfake pornographic images of herself. Imbuing her account with a pressing sense that humanity is “standing on the edge of a precipice,” Bates incisively argues that society must “acknowledg[e] there isn’t an acceptable level of human sacrifice” for “the launch of a new... product,” and that current fixes offered by tech companies, which place the onus for action on victims, are insufficient. This is a disquieting, Cassandra-like plea for a future that doesn’t simply automate misogyny forever. (Aug.)
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Reviewed on: 05/13/2025
Genre: Nonfiction