Anja Shortland is a professor of political economy at King's College London. She is an expert on piracy, kidnapping, art recovery, cultural property crime, and ransomware. Her insights have been featured in publications including The Economist and The New Yorker. Her book Kidnap won the Douglass North Award for the best book in institutional economics. She lives in Wiltshire, England.
""A spellbinding narrative of the rise of hacking and ransomware--from pranksters tinkering with phone lines to cybercriminal gangs capable of taking down whole societies. In clear, illuminating prose, Shortland guides us through the digital underworld, where cybercriminals and intelligence agencies, big tech firms and hackers in childhood bedrooms wage shadowy battles with existential stakes for us all. Dark Screens is a book that every public official, business leader, and concerned citizen should read."" --Edward Fishman, New York Times bestselling author of Chokepoints ""Brilliant, original, and authoritative. An extraordinary book that will change the way you think about ransomware and the digital ecosystems that surround us."" --Peter Frankopan, New York Times bestselling author of The Silk Roads ""Dark Screens is a completely engrossing and extremely well-informed account of a world we wish would disappear--but must expect to grow."" --John Kay, author of The Corporation in the 21st Century ""Shortland takes us into the world of hacking and ransomware as nobody has done so far. This compelling and illuminating book is a must-read."" --Federico Varese, author of Mafias on the Move ""An eye-opening look at a shadowy underworld."" --Publishers Weekly ""[Shortland] makes a persuasive case for the dangerous fragility of our interconnected digital world. . . . A sharp, fast-moving examination of ransomware and the criminal ecosystems that sustain it."" --Kirkus ""Another dispatch from the economic underworld. An expert on extortive crime, Shortland tells the story of ransomware through the fascinating characters that inhabit this criminal ecosystem--its facilitators and its challengers. This is a ripping read that gives readers the insights and tools to make themselves safer from cybercrime."" --Peter T. Leeson, author of The Invisible Hook: The Hidden Economics of Pirates ""Shortland is a gifted storyteller, and this is a real achievement: a page-turning true-crime account of ransomware's rise, rich with human detail and head-spinning figures, technically precise and historically deep."" --Thomas Rid, author of Active Measures ""A gripping exploration of ransomware's rise from curiosity to catastrophe. Blends the human stories behind the malware--from desperate coders to overwhelmed victims--with actionable insights into reducing our collective vulnerability to this billion-dollar criminal extortion and national security threat."" --David Omand, author of How Spies Think ""A fascinating and frightening description of how a largely unregulated system can be used to parasitize the legitimate economy. There is stuff in here that will keep you awake at night."" --Dan Davies, author of Lying for Money ""Shortland is an excellent guide to the hidden paths and secret passages of our economy. Dark Screens is a fascinating book about one of the great scourges of the modern world."" --Oliver Bullough, author of Moneyland