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Issue Details: First known date: 2019... 2019 Dealer's Chance : The Dark Web, Bitcoin and the Fall of Silk Road
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‘It has the capacity to change everything – the way we work, the way we learn and play, even, maybe, the way we sleep or have sex,’ wrote British entrepreneur and author Matt Symonds of his prediction for the internet in The Economist in 1999. ‘Within a few years, the internet will turn business upside down. Be prepared – or die.’  (Introduction)

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  • Appears in:
    y separately published work icon Griffith Review The New Disruptors no. 64 30 April 2019 16455005 2019 periodical issue

    'There is something seductive about aircraft vapour trails, those long streaks – ice, carbon dioxide, soot and metal – that slice the sky. I’ve often wondered what the first person who noticed one thought it was, or what they’d look like to someone who didn’t know airplanes existed. Perhaps magical: linear clouds being drawn straight onto the blue; a symmetrical interruption to the random shapes of clouds. Or perhaps they’d be so unheimlich as to be cause for alarm.' (Ashley Hay: Introduction : Seeing through the digital haze : New perspectives for a new age)

    2019
    pg. 184-194
Last amended 9 May 2019 06:03:59
184-194 Dealer's Chance : The Dark Web, Bitcoin and the Fall of Silk Roadsmall AustLit logo Griffith Review
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