Lee Siegle sits down with the WSJ.com to talk about his new book Against the Machine: Being Human in the Age of the Electronic Mob. My opinion is that this book serves as a controversy point to sell some copies. I don’t think he arguments that interacting in the blogosphere is like interacting with ghosts. The Internet serves as a portal to interact with Chinese, Welsh, Norwegian, South African and so on. Though there my not be the personal connection that a coffee shop conversation lends, but the diversity of conversation is unmatchable. So what if we don’t ever see these people, does that make their comments or ideas different? The book seems like it might be an interesting read, but I am worried about its merit.

Siegle also makes predictions for the web in 5 years. He asserts that the web behaves synchronously with the economy. That is a capitalistic view that I totally disagree with. Whether people have money or not, or the economy is booming or not, the web reacts to its own culture, not such significant elements of the “physical world” as the economy.

Take a look at the Mashable.com article on the interview.