From Ben Tarnoff, New Yorker: “A radiantly original contribution to a conversation gravely in need of new thinking…takes up familiar fixations of tech discourse―privacy, mental health, civic strife―but puts them into such a new and surprising arrangement that they are nearly unrecognizable…Lawyers like to make privacy about process. Pressly makes it about power.”

From John Kaag, The Atlantic: “A probing critique of a modern public sphere that overwhelms the private realm, but it goes further than that…Pressly offers a unique vision of what can be gained by stepping back from the outside world, and the screens that try to possess us.”