This post is provided as convenient place to discussion of the new book, The AI Does Not Hate You by Tom Chivers, which covers LessWrong and rationalist community.
The AI Does Not Hate You: Superintelligence, Rationality and the Race to Save the World
This is a book about AI and AI risk. But it's also more importantly about a community of people who are trying to think rationally about intelligence, and the places that these thoughts are taking them, and what insight they can and can't give us about the future of the human race over the next few years. It explains why these people are worried, why they might be right, and why they might be wrong. It is a book about the cutting edge of our thinking on intelligence and rationality right now by the people who stay up all night worrying about it.
Note that the book is available on Kindle only to people with UK/European Amazon accounts. I was able to order it in physical copy in the US, but I haven't received a shipping notification yet.
You mean Part 7 ("The Dark Sides"), or the ways in which the book is bad?
I thought Part 7 was well-done, overall; he asks if we're a cult (and decides "no" after talking about the question in a sensible way), has a chapter on "you can't psychoanalyze your way to the truth", and talks about feminism and neoreactionaries in a way that's basically sensible.
Some community gossip shows up, but in a way that seems almost totally fair and respects the privacy of the people involved. My one complaint, as someone responsible for the LessWrong brand, is that he refers to one piece of community gossip as 'the LessWrong baby' and discusses a comment thread in which people are unkind to the mother*, while that comment thread happened on SlateStarCodex. But this is mostly the fault of the person he interviewed in that chapter, I think, who introduced that term, and is likely a sensible attempt to avoid naming the actual humans involved, which is what I've done whenever I want to refer to the gossip.
*I'm deliberately not naming the people involved, as they aren't named in the book either, and suspect it should stay that way. If you already know the story you know the search terms, and if you don't it's not really relevant.