21 episodes

Data is the most valuable resource on our planet, and the data economy impacts everything from mental health to human rights. On Season 2 of Technically Optimistic, host Raffi Krikorian engages engineers, activists, professors, and more to ask big questions about our data-driven era. How and why is our data being collected? How is it affecting our daily lives, our decision-making, our political systems? Perhaps most importantly, what does the future of data look like, and what can we do to help shape it? This season of Technically Optimistic is all about your data, and how you can gain back some control.

Technically Optimistic Emerson Collective

    • Technology

Data is the most valuable resource on our planet, and the data economy impacts everything from mental health to human rights. On Season 2 of Technically Optimistic, host Raffi Krikorian engages engineers, activists, professors, and more to ask big questions about our data-driven era. How and why is our data being collected? How is it affecting our daily lives, our decision-making, our political systems? Perhaps most importantly, what does the future of data look like, and what can we do to help shape it? This season of Technically Optimistic is all about your data, and how you can gain back some control.

    Who's watching the kids?

    Who's watching the kids?

    Whether we like it or not, the kids are online — and they’re being tracked just like the rest of us. Who’s after their data, and why? We examine the harms minors face online — from how tech companies profit off addictive usership, to the consequences of social media on kids’ mental health and emotional development — and we explore some new proposals for how to protect their privacy. Are more parental controls the answer? Will newly-proposed laws be the key? Or will these bills cause more harm than good?
    In this episode, Raffi is joined by U.S. Senator Richard Blumenthal (D-CT); author Rosalind Wiseman; Facebook whistleblower Frances Haugen; research fellow Tiera Tanksley; Jim Steyer, CEO of Common Sense Media; and Manmeet Dhindsa, attorney at the Federal Trade Commission.

    To learn more about Technically Optimistic and to read the transcript for this episode: emersoncollective.com/technically-optimistic-podcast
    For more on Emerson Collective: emersoncollective.com
    Learn more about our host, Raffi Krikorian: emersoncollective.com/raffi
    Technically Optimistic is produced by Emerson Collective with music by Mattie Safer.
    Subscribe to our weekly newsletter: technicallyoptimistic.substack.com
    Follow on social media @emersoncollective and @emcollectivepodcasts
    Email us with questions and feedback at us@technicallyoptimistic.com

    To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy

    Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices

    • 1 hr 3 min
    Policed by our data

    Policed by our data

    New technologies, such as facial recognition, are being used by law enforcement to identify, locate, and convict people. Powered by data gathered from across the internet, these imperfect programs can sometimes get it wrong, resulting in wrongful arrests. Are these surveillance systems making us safer, or just the opposite? How can we conceptualize the relationship between data and criminal justice? Does the Fourth Amendment protect us from data-driven policing? And how can we maintain our own “cyber hygiene” to keep our data secure? 
    In this episode, Raffi talks to experts about these new technologies as they relate to our civil liberties, laws, and values. Guests include Kashmir Hill, New York Times privacy reporter and author of the book Your Face Belongs To Us; Jonathan Zittrain, Harvard professor and faculty director of the Berkman Klein Center for Internet and Society; Jennifer Lynch, general counsel at the Electronic Frontier Foundation; Jen Easterly, Director of the U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency; and Congressman Ted Lieu (D-CA).

    To learn more about Technically Optimistic and to read the transcript for this episode: emersoncollective.com/technically-optimistic-podcast
    For more on Emerson Collective: emersoncollective.com
    Learn more about our host, Raffi Krikorian: emersoncollective.com/raffi
    Technically Optimistic is produced by Emerson Collective with music by Mattie Safer.
    Subscribe to our weekly newsletter: technicallyoptimistic.substack.com
    Follow on social media @emersoncollective and @emcollectivepodcasts
    Email us with questions and feedback at us@technicallyoptimistic.com

    To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy

    Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices

    • 1 hr 2 min
    Digital surveillance and reproductive rights

    Digital surveillance and reproductive rights

    Digital surveillance is becoming increasingly threatening to the reproductive rights of women and pregnant people in America after the fall of Roe v. Wade. Behavioral data collected from apps can be used to catalog — and criminalize — our health care choices. In this “wild west” surveillance economy, who is responsible for safeguarding our privacy? Could more and more of our data be weaponized against us in this same way? How can technology be harnessed to help protect privacy, rather than further jeopardize it? 
    Host Raffi Krikorian talks to people working to protect reproductive freedom in an ever-changing landscape. Guests include Sue Dunlap, the President and CEO of Planned Parenthood Los Angeles; Melanie Fontes Rainer, Director of the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services Office for Civil Rights; Kevin Williams, VP of digital products at Planned Parenthood; Amy Merrill, digital director and co-founder of Plan C; and Congressman Ted Lieu (D-CA).

    To learn more about Technically Optimistic and to read the transcript for this episode: emersoncollective.com/technically-optimistic-podcast
    For more on Emerson Collective: emersoncollective.com
    Learn more about our host, Raffi Krikorian: emersoncollective.com/raffi
    Technically Optimistic is produced by Emerson Collective with music by Mattie Safer.
    Subscribe to our weekly newsletter: technicallyoptimistic.substack.com
    Follow on social media @emersoncollective and @emcollectivepodcasts
    Email us with questions and feedback at us@technicallyoptimistic.com

    To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy

    Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices

    • 56 min
    Your data, your vote

    Your data, your vote

    Modern political campaigning has become a massive data operation. In the US, candidates from both parties frequently use data to try and better understand voters, in hopes of swaying them on election day. But how, exactly, is voter information being acquired, analyzed, and employed to influence voters? Do modeling and targeting really move the needle? And how are political campaigns a microcosm of the data economy, illuminating how data can transform society? 
    In this episode, Raffi talks to election veterans, data specialists, and former colleagues from his time as CTO at the Democratic National Committee, to talk about how data is utilized in campaigns. Guests include Dan Wagner, CEO of Civis Analytics; political consultant Max Wood; Lindsey Schuh Cortes, CEO of TargetSmart; and Tara McGowan, former political strategist & publisher of COURIER.

    To learn more about Technically Optimistic and to read the transcript for this episode: emersoncollective.com/technically-optimistic-podcast
    For more on Emerson Collective: emersoncollective.com
    Learn more about our host, Raffi Krikorian: emersoncollective.com/raffi
    Technically Optimistic is produced by Emerson Collective with music by Mattie Safer.
    Subscribe to our weekly newsletter: technicallyoptimistic.substack.com
    Follow on social media @emersoncollective and @emcollectivepodcasts
    Email us with questions and feedback at us@technicallyoptimistic.com

    To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy

    Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices

    • 1 hr
    How to save social media

    How to save social media

    When social media is at its best, we get genuine human connection, built-in audiences, and exciting avenues for creativity and exchange. But our current social platforms are built on a surveillance model, where our data is used to predict our behavior, show us ads, and train the algorithms that keep us perpetually on the platform. It’s time to explore a new vision for social media, where we don’t have to give up on privacy in order to connect. 
    In this episode, Raffi talks to prominent critics of existing social media — and the people actively reimagining it, with truly private messaging, hyperlocal communities, and renewed sense of control over our own social data. Guests include Facebook whistleblower Frances Haugen, whose 2021 leaks made national news and put the social media giant in the Congressional spotlight; scholar and internet activist Ethan Zuckerman; Meredith Whittaker, the president of the Signal Foundation; Flipboard co-founder Mike McCue; and Harvard Law professor Jonathan Zittrain.

    To learn more about Technically Optimistic and to read the transcript for this episode: emersoncollective.com/technically-optimistic-podcast
    For more on Emerson Collective: emersoncollective.com
    Learn more about our host, Raffi Krikorian: emersoncollective.com/raffi
    Technically Optimistic is produced by Emerson Collective with music by Mattie Safer.
    Subscribe to our weekly newsletter: technicallyoptimistic.substack.com
    Follow on social media @emersoncollective and @emcollectivepodcasts
    Email us with questions and feedback at us@technicallyoptimistic.com

    To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy

    Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices

    • 1 hr
    How your behavior became the world's biggest resource

    How your behavior became the world's biggest resource

    How has our data become the world’s most valuable resource? What privacy tradeoffs are we making when we engage with personalized apps, recommendations, and always-connected smart devices? Is our personal data being used to make things better, or to make tech giants even more powerful? And what do “cookies” have to do with all this? 
    Host Raffi Krikorian chats with experts about data’s role in AI, “big data” and the data economy, surveillance capitalism, and much more. Guests include AI researcher Amba Kak, executive director of the AI Now Institute; data scientist Chris Wiggins, co-author of How Data Happened; media scholar, tech writer, and internet activist Ethan Zuckerman; engineer and inventor of the cookie Lou Montulli; and Harvard professor Jonathan Zittrain.

    To learn more about Technically Optimistic and to read the transcript for this episode: emersoncollective.com/technically-optimistic-podcast
    For more on Emerson Collective: emersoncollective.com
    Learn more about our host, Raffi Krikorian: emersoncollective.com/raffi
    Technically Optimistic is produced by Emerson Collective with music by Mattie Safer.
    Subscribe to our weekly newsletter: technicallyoptimistic.substack.com
    Follow on social media @emersoncollective and @emcollectivepodcasts
    Email us with questions and feedback at us@technicallyoptimistic.com

    To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy

    Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices

    • 50 min

Top Podcasts In Technology

TED Radio Hour
NPR
GRC & Cyber Security Podcast
SureCloud
WSJ’s The Future of Everything
The Wall Street Journal
How About Tomorrow?
Adam Elmore & Dax Raad
Lenny's Podcast: Product | Growth | Career
Lenny Rachitsky
The Vergecast
The Verge

You Might Also Like

Hard Fork
The New York Times
The Gray Area with Sean Illing
Vox
Pivot
New York Magazine
The Ezra Klein Show
New York Times Opinion
Radio Atlantic
The Atlantic
Your Undivided Attention
Tristan Harris and Aza Raskin, The Center for Humane Technology