In the Middle Ages, power was measured in castles, land, and the loyalty of subjects.
In the age of AI, it's measured in platforms, data, and the attention of billions.
We are told we live in a digital democracy, yet every day we surrender more control to a handful of corporate lords who rule invisible kingdoms without borders. They own the algorithms that shape our choices, the infrastructures that hold our work and relationships, and the data trails that reveal our deepest selves.
The Risks of Technofeudalism in the Wake of AI is a field report from the inside of this transformation-written not by a detached expert, but by a second-year Georgetown University student majoring in Computer Science, Ethics & Society, who has grown up entirely under the shadow of these emerging empires. It is both personal and political, weaving lived experience with sharp analysis to expose how the promises of artificial intelligence mask an age-old bargain: your freedom in exchange for their protection.
Across 25 immersive chapters, you'll see how the walls of these digital fortresses are built, how our autonomy is eroded under the illusion of choice, and why the borderless reach of AI-powered platforms threatens not just privacy, but democracy itself. You'll explore how our relationship to technology mirrors the feudal contracts of the past-and what it will take to break them before they become unbreakable.
Urgent, unsettling, and deeply human, this book doesn't just diagnose the problem-it dares to imagine a way out. If you've ever wondered whether the age of AI is leading us toward liberation or into a new kind of servitude, you can't afford to ignore the warnings in these pages.
The time to question the contract is now. The time to act is already running out.