Could you provide a brief summary of the book Fooled by Randomness, by Nassim Nicholas Taleb? Please provide a few paragraphs with the summary and the main points discussed in the book. 
How well the book was accepted and was there any negative or positive critic of the work presented there?
Here is a summary of Fooled by Randomness by Nassim Nicholas Taleb:

The book explores the role that luck and chance play in our lives, and how we are often blinded to their impact. Taleb argues that much of what we attribute to skill or hard work is actually the result of randomness. Success or failure in the markets, or in life more generally, may just be a matter of being at the right place at the right time or happening to make a choice that randomly pays off.

The book's central points are:
1) We tend to underestimate the role of chance and luck in life, and we overestimate the role of skill and control. This can lead to false confidence in our decisions and abilities.
2) Randomness plays a huge role in the markets and in life. Success is often the result of luck, even if we attribute it to skill. Failure can also just be a result of bad luck, even if we blame ourselves.
3) We must acknowledge the role of randomness to make better decisions and more accurate judgments. We need to adopt an attitude of humility and understand that we don't control as much as we think we do.

The book was fairly well-received and praised for its contrarian insights, though some criticized it as excessively pessimistic or fatalistic. It has application for investors, decision-makers, and anyone seeking to better understand the influence of chance in their own lives.

Does this help summarize the key points and reception of the book? Let me know if you would like me to elaborate on any part of the summary or provide additional resources on related topics like decision-making under uncertainty.
Yes it is, but it's still too long for a brief summary. Can you shorten it a bit? Around 20% shorter than it is now, please.
Here is a shorter summary of Fooled by Randomness by Nassim Nicholas Taleb:

In the book Taleb explores the role that randomness plays in our lives and argues that it is the deciding factor in much of what we attribute to skill or hard work. Success or failure in the markets, or in life more generally, may just be a matter of being at the right place at the right time. Its central points are:

- We tend to underestimate the role of chance and luck, and overestimate that of skill and control, leading to a false confidence in our decisions and abilities.
- Randomness plays a huge role in the markets and in life. Success and failure are often the result of luck, even if we attribute it to our skills or lack thereof.
- We must acknowledge the role of randomness to make better decisions. We need to adopt an attitude of humility and understand out limitations.

The book was fairly well-received and has application for investors, decision-makers, and anyone curious about the role of chance.