By day, Angie, a twenty-year veteran of the tech industry, is a data analyst at Tomo, the world’s largest social networking company; by night, she exploits her database access to profile domestic abusers and kill the worst of them. She can’t change her own traumatic past, but she can save other women.
When Tomo introduces a deceptive new product that preys on users’ fears to drive up its own … up its own revenue, Angie sees Tomo for what it really is—another evil abuser. Using her coding and hacking expertise, she decides to destroy Tomo by building a new social network that is completely distributed, compartmentalized, and unstoppable. If she succeeds, it will be the end of all centralized power in the Internet.
But how can an anti-social, one-armed programmer with too many dark secrets succeed when the world’s largest tech company is out to crush her and a no-name government black ops agency sets a psychopath to look into her growing digital footprint?
“Awesome, thrilling, and creepy: a fast-paced portrayal of the startup world, and the perils of our personal data and technical infrastructure in the wrong hands.”
—Brad Feld, managing director of Foundry Group
“His most ambitious work yet. A murder thriller about high tech surveillance and espionage in the startup world. Like the best of Tom Clancy and Barry Eisner.”
—Gene Kim, author of The Phoenix Project.
“Explores the creation and effects of the templated self, the rise of structured identity and one-size-fits-all media culture, and feasible alternatives.”
—Amber Case, author of Calm Technology
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This was a most interesting read…so nice to learn as you enjoy a good crime.
Computer knowledge WAY above me but hook was great anyway.
Best book I have read in lately. Love this book.
Not scary in the horror sense, but that hackers and government have really created a big brother world. If all of that could actually be done, we are in trouble. It was a long book and full of tech lingo. As a tech guy, I understood the processes, but for someone who is not tech savvy, some of the acronyms and processes used could have been explained better. Or, as in some books that I’ve seen, put a list of acronyms and their meanings in the front of the book so that readers can have a reference. Overall, I liked the story.
Wow absolutely amazing,topical cutting edge technology with a sprinkling off jack reacher,very very original and believable
Great combining of current tech and social trends into an action/thriller. I loved the characters developed.
Provocative IT based adventure that raises great questions about privacy and technology as it challenges you to outguess the author. Helps if you speak some computer lingo.
Kept me guessing until the end!
a good read! and informative!
I learned a lot about coding and cyber security. This is top notch. Stayed up till morning to finish !
The technical stuff totally escaped me, but the ability of those that have those skills is terrifying. How these guys went after one another with all the connections and patches and whathaveyou was truly frightening.
The Big Brother quality of having all one’s information out there and accessible to those who can manipulate systems and machines to acquire it is so very disturbing.
In terms of the story, I liked the girl and I did like how it ended.
Fun, fast read.
easy read good book
Lots of tech stuff I didn’t understand but enjoyed the story and learned a lot!!!
This book was different from predecessor but totally captivating. Kept me on edge of seat throughout it.
This would’ve been a great book if the main character was more believable. I got hung up on the fact that she couldn’t tell her partner how much she appreciated him putting up with her demons. Being open like that is usually something a man has issues with and this book was written by a man so that aspect made sense but made her less believable. Otherwise, it’s a great book that could’ve been one of my favs.
What A Thrill
Kill Process was like 5 books rolled into one. It was one of those books that I had to take in bite-sized chunks because I didn’t want it to end. I found this book because of Hertling’s Avogadro Corp books. I must have bought it months ago because when I saw the second book in this series while prepping my weekly New and Notable posts I was surprised and thrilled to see it in my library.
Kill Process tells the story of Angie, a 45-year-old hacker/programmer with lots of problems. She works for Tomo (basically a fictional Facebook) by day and at night she kills off domestic abusers in mysterious ways. That’s just the first part of the book (and what could have been its own book). She’s introduced to a new product that Tomo wants to introduce and decides that she can no longer work for such a disingenuous company and strikes it off on her own to try and compete with the tech giant. What follows would be a spoiler but is full of a wild ride of a story from beginning to end.
Kill Process is Hertlings best book I’ve read yet. He fills the pages with perfect examples of tech, white and black hat hacking, real SQL database queries, and lots of other techno-jargon that would give people who work in the industry that “feel good” feeling knowing how much Hertling knows and is able to shove into the book. Think The Martian for space/science but for computers and tech. It definitely had a Mr. Robot feel (without the distinctive split personalities) especially when it came to the hacks that Angie described. It also had a bit of a Fight Club feel (also without the same distinctive split personalities) but the “take down the man” feel. It throws in a lot of other things from a lot of other sources but the biggest thing that it felt was real. Sure, Tomo is not Facebook, but it is. They know everything about us, the way that Hertling describes the way that they keep users, not because they want to stay, but because it’s where all their friends just hit a little too close to home. Throw in the recent data breaches and other similarly pitched products by Facebook and it’s a terrifyingly real depiction of where we could be right now without even knowing it.
I work in the tech industry (specifically in and around online advertising) and the scene where Angie talked about using data to figure out that moving an ad 3 degrees in Cincinnati (I think that was where she said) caused a higher click-through rate hit a little too close to home for me (but also made me realize just how good Hertling’s research and knowledge of the industry is.
Another thing that I think Hertling hit on the head with Kill Process was the psychological feelings, reactions, and inner thoughts that Angie had after enduring what she endured with her husband. Even the conversations with her therapist were definitely taken from real therapy sessions and ways that people can calm anxiety among other issues. The repeated scenes of flashbacks, reactions, and irrational thoughts that Angie describes feeling were absolutely perfect. So perfect that I wonder if they would cause a real trigger for others who have been abused (physically or emotionally). My wife was never in anything that rough, but there are still things that she does (where she sits in a restaurant is a good example) that Hertling perfected with Angie.
I know that the second book in this series was just released, but I need to take a mental break for a few days. I will hopefully read it before the end of 2018 (but no promises). Hertling is on the top of his game interweaving the Avagadro world with the Tomo/Tapestry world mentioning Avagadro numerous times and spurring that little memory bank from reading some of the Avogadro Corp books.
A fantastic technothriller that will stick with me for a long time. Hertling’s Kill Process is one of the best books in the genre I’ve read in a long time.
Related: Avogadro Corp.
Daunting thriller about social media and start-ups, and what social even means now. Also, what does constant surveillance do to us?
Great heroine!