Machines Like Us
Ein Podcast von The Globe and Mail - Dienstags
90 Folgen
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Rod Sims on Australia’s New Law to Rebalance Media Power
Vom: 1.3.2021 -
Bishop Steven Croft on Keeping Humanity at the Centre of New Technology
Vom: 18.2.2021 -
Lana Swartz on the Power of Payment Platforms
Vom: 4.2.2021 -
Joan Donovan on How Platforms Enabled the Capitol Hill Riot
Vom: 21.1.2021 -
Beeban Kidron on Why Children Need a Safer Internet
Vom: 7.1.2021 -
Ron Deibert on Resetting Our Relationship with Technology
Vom: 22.12.2020 -
Heidi J. Larson on the Root Causes of Vaccine Hesitancy
Vom: 10.12.2020 -
Cory Doctorow on the True Dangers of Surveillance Capitalism
Vom: 26.11.2020 -
Everybody Cares about Democracy and Technology: David and Taylor Look at the State of Big Tech Governance
Vom: 27.8.2020 -
Ellen Jorgensen on Biotech’s Potential and the Complexities of Regulation
Vom: 13.8.2020 -
Damian Collins on Joining Forces to Regulate Big Tech
Vom: 30.7.2020 -
Emily Bell on Journalism in the Age of Social Media
Vom: 16.7.2020 -
Matt Stoller on Taking on the Tech Goliaths
Vom: 2.7.2020 -
Maria Ressa on How Social Media Can Destabilize Democracy and Journalism
Vom: 16.6.2020 -
Carly Kind on Contact-tracing Apps
Vom: 4.6.2020 -
Joseph Stiglitz on a Post-COVID-19 Economy
Vom: 21.5.2020 -
Douglas Rushkoff on Reclaiming Our Humanity on the Internet
Vom: 7.5.2020 -
Angie Drobnic Holan on the Importance of Fact-checking during a Pandemic
Vom: 23.4.2020 -
Season 2 Begins April 23
Vom: 9.4.2020 -
Sasha Havlicek on Mitigating the Spread of Online Extremism
Vom: 12.3.2020
Machines Like Us is a technology show about people. We are living in an age of breakthroughs propelled by advances in artificial intelligence. Technologies that were once the realm of science fiction will become our reality: robot best friends, bespoke gene editing, brain implants that make us smarter. Every other Tuesday Taylor Owen sits down with the people shaping this rapidly approaching future. He’ll speak with entrepreneurs building world-changing technologies, lawmakers trying to ensure they’re safe, and journalists and scholars working to understand how they’re transforming our lives.
