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Paulina Borsook : ウィキペディア英語版 | Paulina Borsook Paulina Borsook is an American technology journalist and writer who has written for ''Wired'', ''Mother Jones'', and Suck.com. She is perhaps best known for her 2000 book ''Cyberselfish'', a critique of the libertarian mindset of the digital technology community. As an artist-in-residence at Stanford University, in 2013 she began work on ''My Life as a Ghost,'' an art installation based on her experiences living with the traumatic brain injury she suffered due to a gunshot when she was 14 years old. ==Biography== Paulina Borsook was born in Pasadena, California. In 1969, when she was 15, she ran away from home and stayed at Rochdale College in Toronto, Canada. She later attended UC Santa Barbara where she ran a radio show on KCSB. She graduated from UC Berkeley with a degree in psycholinguistics and a minor in philosophy. She then attended graduate school at the University of Arizona before transferring to Columbia University where she earned her MFA.〔(【引用サイトリンク】url = http://www.paulinaborsook.com/about.html )〕 Beginning in 1981, Borsook took a job at a Marin County, California software company. She later worked for the New York-based ''Data Communications'' publication in 1984 before returning to San Francisco in 1987.〔 Borsook has written extensively about the culture surrounding technology, including Silicon Valley, cypherpunks, bionomics, and technolibertarianism. Her first short story, "Virtual Romance", was nominated for the Pushcart Prize.〔 She became a contributing writer at ''Wired'' in the 1990s and her short story about an email romance, "Love Over The Wires", was the first fiction published by the magazine. She has also written for ''Mother Jones'' and Suck.com, where she wrote under the name "Justine".
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