Type One Planet

Robert Roche

The purpose of this project is to help lay the foundational elements of becoming a Type One Planet. Watch Ep. 1 for information on what a Type One Planet is. This video podcast features interviews, round tables, debates, and collaborative sessions to ideate on concepts that will enable us to lay the foundation for becoming a Type One Planet. Each guest is a mission driven visionary, including inventors, scientists, and early entrepreneurs. Each interview is a deep exploration on the innovation, technology, or line of scientific study that the guest is pursuing.

  1. 11/17/2023

    Navigating the Complexities of AI Safety, Awareness, and Governance ◄ Ruben Dieleman

    ◄ Episode Description Ruben Dieleman is a campaigner for the Existential Risk Observatory, an organization dedicated to reducing human existential risk by increasing public awareness about threats facing our civilization. In this interview, Ruben focuses primarily on artificial intelligence, discussing the AI alignment problem, defining key phrases used in AI debates, and explaining why there are so many differing perspectives on AI's risks and ethical development. We explore how awareness affects outcomes, how to educate politicians and the public on complex issues like AI without causing confusion or dismissal. Ruben provides recommendations for newsletters, individuals, and organizations to follow to stay current on AI safety research and debates. He previews an upcoming summit on AI safety that the Existential Risk Observatory is hosting, indicating it will be an important milestone in bringing more political leaders into the conversation. Overall this is an essential listen for anyone looking to enhance their understanding of AI risk, the dynamics of the AI safety community, and how civil society organizations are working to raise awareness on issues relating to human existential risk. ◄ Episode Timestamps (00:00:00) Introduction (00:02:00) The mission of the Existential Risk Observatory (00:03:24) Where the 1 in 6 existential risk statistic comes from (00:05:07) Defining existential risk (00:07:33) Explaining unaligned AI and the alignment problem (00:09:16) Moving away from the concept of AI alignment (00:10:56) New concepts like scalable/responsible AI (00:12:25) Calls for a moratorium on certain kinds of AI development (00:13:34) Game theory dynamics around calls for AI pauses (00:15:08) Key risks posed by artificial superintelligence (00:16:46) Informing the general public without inducing dismissiveness (00:18:45) AI and the future of human employment (00:21:01) The upcoming AI Safety Summit and what it signifies (00:23:40) Keeping abreast of AI developments and debates (00:26:43) Communicating AI risks to politicians and the general public (00:29:37) Government regulation and oversight of AI development (00:31:43) Hopes for initiatives like an AI atomic agency (00:33:15) Resources for staying current on AI safety topics (00:35:31) How to follow the Existential Risk Observatory's work ◄ Episode Topic Score   Culture (8) Design (7) Education (9) Environment (4) Science (6) Technology (10) ◄ Additional Episode Resources  Existential Risk Observatory: https://www.existentialriskobservatory.org/ Ruben’s Twitter: https://twitter.com/RBNDLM AI Summit Talk Recording: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n3LIKX13V60 ◄ Ruben’s ultimate AI newsletter recommendations: Existential Risk Observatory Newsletter: https://xriskobservatory.substack.com/ Navigating AI Risks: https://www.navigatingrisks.ai/ Second Best: https://www.secondbest.ca/ The EU AI Act Newsletter: https://artificialintelligenceact.substack.com/ AGI Safety Weekly: https://safety.blog/ Marcus On AI: https://garymarcus.substack.com/ AI Policy Perspectives: https://aipolicyperspectives.substack.com/ AI Safety Newsletter: https://newsletter.safe.ai/ Understanding AI: https://www.understandingai.org/

    45 min
  2. 11/03/2023

    Memes, Moloch, and Democracy's Demise: How to Decode And Fix Social Media ◄ Tobias Rose-Stockwell

    ◄ Episode Description Tobias Rose-Stockwell is the author of “The Outrage Machine: How Tech Amplifies Discontent, Disrupts Democracy and What We Can Do About It”. He is a leading thinker and researcher on the impacts of social media and technology on society, and in this interview Tobias provides deep insights into how social media companies like Facebook, Twitter and TikTok have shaped modern discourse, impacted institutions like journalism and democracy, and how they can be transformed to positively alter the trajectory of our species.  In this interview we have an  in-depth discussion around the incentives and structures within social media that drive outrage, disinformation and division. Key topics include how social media algorithms maximize engagement through intermittent variable rewards, how context collapse and context creep distort information, and how journalism has been impacted by the race for clicks and outrage. Tobias outlines constructive solutions, including regulations like the Platform Accountability and Transparency Act, as well as bottom-up community moderation tools like X's Community Notes. This episode is important for understanding the urgent challenges we face from today's social media landscape, and how we can create technologies that bring out the best in humankind rather than the worst. Tobias makes a compelling case that while social media has delivered tremendous value, thoughtful reforms of incentives, greater transparency, and empowering users are needed to realize its full potential while mitigating harms. His articulate analysis provides actionable insights for users, platforms and policymakers alike. ◄ Episode Timestamps (00:00) Introduction (00:03:00) Defining key concepts like memes, Moloch, and the dark valley(00:08:30) How social media incentives drive engagement and virality(00:13:00) The early optimistic vision for social media(00:17:00) How social media won out - verified connections(00:22:00) Features that shifted social media to information sharing(00:29:00) Virality, clickbait and optimized outrage(00:36:00) Incentives corrupting journalism(00:43:00) Context collapse and context creep distorting events(00:51:00) Scissor statements perfectly dividing groups(00:53:00) Free speech challenges and minority opinions(01:08:30) Can social media be reformed or is it inherently corrupting?(01:12:00) Individual tactics for healthier media consumption(01:14:00) Policy reforms like Platform Accountability and Transparency Act(01:15:00) Better bottom-up and community-driven moderation approaches ◄ Episode Topic Score   Culture (9) Design (8) Education (7) Environment (4)  Science (5) Technology (10) ◄ Additional Episode Resources  Outrage Machine: https://www.outragemachine.org/ X Account: https://twitter.com/TobiasRose Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/tobiased/?hl=en Medium: https://tobiasrose.medium.com/ Website: https://tobias.cc/ ◄ Engage with Type One Planet:  Website: www.typeoneplanet.net Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/typeoneplanet/ TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@typeoneplanet

    1h 22m
  3. 10/06/2023

    Decoding Civilizational Collapse ◄ Joseph Tainter

    ◄ Episode Description Joseph is a professor in the Department of Environment and Society at Utah State University. He is perhaps best known as the author of the 1988 book The Collapse of Complex Societies, which examines the dynamics and processes that lead civilizations to decay and unravel. This seminal work remains a key text for anyone seeking to comprehend how societies evolve, adapt, and sometimes catastrophically fail. In his research, Joseph tackles big questions about civilizational sustainability, the ability to problem-solve, and the complex interplay of factors that allow civilizations to thrive or decline. His core argument is that as societies evolve to solve problems, they become more complex. This added complexity initially yields benefits and new capabilities, but over time it requires ever more resources to sustain itself, leading to diminishing returns. Eventually the costs of maintaining complexity overwhelm the benefits, setting the stage for collapse. Joseph’s ability to analyze civilizations using an anthropological lens provides a unique vantage point for assessing our current global system.  ◄ Episode Timestamps (00:00:00) Defining complexity in societies - structure and organization (00:05:25) The tradeoff between structure and organization (00:06:54) Why inequality and heterogeneity are signs of a complex society (00:08:15) Why collapse may not intrinsically be a catastrophe (00:11:00) Every time history repeats, the cost goes up (00:14:05) The diminishing returns of sociopolitical complexity (00:17:06) Assessing our response to COVID-19 (00:22:20) The paradox of collectively investing in complexity (00:26:30) Why energy subsidies delay civilizational collapse (00:28:52) Modern existential risks (00:30:55) What has changed about existential risk in recent decades years? (00:37:00) Book recommendations for learning about civilizational collapse (00:39:30) Explanation of Type One Planet ◄ Episode Topic Score   Culture (9) Design (8) Education (10) Environment (5) Science (6) Technology (7) ◄ Additional Episode Resources  The Collapse of Complex Societies (Book): https://www.amazon.com/Collapse-Complex-Societies-Studies-Archaeology/dp/052138673X The Great Wave (Book) : https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Great_Wave_(book) Heat, Power, and Light (Book): https://www.amazon.com/Heat-Power-Light-Revolutions-Services/dp/1845426606 The Lessons of History (Book): https://www.amazon.com/Lessons-History-Will-Durant/dp/143914995X ◄ Engage with Type One Planet:  Website: www.typeoneplanet.net Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/typeoneplanet/ TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@typeoneplanet

    42 min
  4. 09/22/2023

    Transparency, Resilience, and Pandemic Preparedness ◄ Dr. Tom Inglesby

    ◄ Episode Description Dr. Tom Inglesby is internationally recognized for his work in public health preparedness, pandemic response, and infectious diseases. He is the Director of the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. He was previously a senior advisor to the Biden Administration on the White HouseCOVID-19 response team, where he served as the National Coordinator for Testing. In this interview, Dr. Inglesby provides valuable insights into the lessons learned from the COVID-19 pandemic and how to be better prepared for future pandemics. He outlined the need for a protocol to respond quickly to global pandemics, managing public perceptions and communications of life-saving information during times of uncertainty, and ensuring governmental transparency of decision making processes during these events. We also touched on how to approach a lack of confidence in interventions like vaccines and social distancing measures, misinformation and disinformation in pandemic response efforts, and how organizations like the CDC are working towards changing and strengthening their approach to communication and public health. Dr. Inglesby's expertise and experiences provide valuable insights into navigating uncertainty, making effective decisions, and resource allocation during a pandemic.  ◄ Episode Timestamps (2:42) Type One Planet's Role in Addressing Pandemics (6:31) Reflecting on the COVID-19 Pandemic (8:56) Unpacking the Complexities of Pandemics (9:44) Exploring Global Responses to Pandemics (13:35) The Challenges and Triumphs of Health Preparedness (19:00) Global Cooperation in Times of Crisis (23:07) The Future of Pandemic Response Strategies (24:09) A Closer Look at Global Pandemic Protocols (26:55) Lessons from the COVID-19 Outbreak (29:50) Navigating the Challenges of Pandemics (36:23) The Role of Science in Pandemic Responses (39:55) Unveiling the Intricacies of Health Security (44:15) Delving into Health Preparedness Strategies (44:34) Deciphering the Global Health Landscape (47:47) The Path Forward in Pandemic Preparedness ◄ Episode Topic Score   Culture (9) Design (4) Education (8) Environment (7)  Science (10) Technology (6) ◄ Additional Episode Resources  Tom's Johns Hopkins Bio Page: https://centerforhealthsecurity.org/who-we-are/our-people/tom-inglesby-md Tom's LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/tom-inglesby-93b51582 Tom's Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tom_Inglesby Tom's Twitter: https://twitter.com/T_Inglesby NYT Opinion on CDC Overhaul: https://www.nytimes.com/2023/05/07/opinion/cdc-overhaul.html JH Center For Health Security Twitter: https://twitter.com/JHSPH_CHS @JHSPH_CHS JH Center For Health Security LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/jhcenterforhealthsecurity/ JH Center For Health Security YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/user/biosecuritycntr ◄ Engage with Type One Planet:  Website: www.typeoneplanet.net Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/typeoneplanet/ TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@typeoneplanet

    48 min
  5. 09/08/2023

    How To Make Jet Fuel Out Of Air ◄ Dr. Staff Sheehan

    ◄ Episode Description Stafford Sheehan is the Cofounder and CTO of Air Company, a groundbreaking company focused on creating jet fuel and ethanol from water, electrolysis, and carbon dioxide. With numerous patents and academic publications to his name, Sheehan has been recognized for his innovation and expertise, including being featured in the Forbes 30 under 30 list. In this interview, Sheehan discusses the cutting-edge work being done at Air Company, from their carbon-neutral method of creating fuel to their collaboration with NASA for creating Jet fuel on Mars, Sheehan delves into the challenges and opportunities of sustainable energy solutions. Sheehan emphasizes the importance of democratizing energy and making it accessible to all, as opposed to being controlled by a select few. He provides insights into scaling up innovative technology, the role of design in conveying sustainability, and the need for renewable or low carbon electricity for a carbon neutral (or negative) future in transportation technology.  A particularly fascinating aspect of the interview is the discussion around Air Company's involvement with NASA and their efforts towards sustainable energy on Mars. Sheehan shares how their technology can utilize Mars' abundant carbon dioxide and water resources to reduce the need for transporting materials from Earth. ◄ Episode Timestamps (00:00) Introduction and company background (02:43) Pricing in the social cost of carbon dioxide (05:18) Challenges in deploying alternative fuel technologies (07:40) Implementation of credits and tax incentives (10:54) Stafford Sheehan's background and accomplishments (14:07) Air Company's mission and technology (19:03) Importance of synthetic fuels for aviation and space exploration (22:08) Scaling up technology and minimizing financial risk (25:52) Plans for a small commercial plant and larger plants (28:00) Challenges in obtaining sufficient renewable electricity (32:12) Air Company's involvement with NASA and Mars exploration (35:40) Using Mars as an early adopter for technology commercialization (36:25) The economics of renewable jet fuel production (39:13) The significance of photosynthesis in technology inspiration (42:25) Communicating sustainability to consumers (45:09) NASA's efforts in carbon dioxide transformation and reusability (47:57) Making alcohols and nutritional yeast mixture from CO2 (52:14) Climate change and the speaker's perspective on immediate extinction (56:23) Energy independence and its importance for disadvantaged communities (58:58) Air Company's vision for a sustainable future and energy security ◄ Episode Topic Score   Culture (6) Design (7) Education (5) Environment (8)  Science (9) Technology (10) ◄ Additional Episode Resources  Air Company: https://www.aircompany.com/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/aircompany/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/AirCoNYC/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/theaircompany/ Staff’s LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/staffw/ ◄ Engage with Type One Planet:  Website: www.typeoneplanet.net Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/typeoneplanet/ TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@typeoneplanet

    1h 6m
  6. 06/16/2023

    How The Powerful Hack Our Society, And How To Fix It ◄ Bruce Schneier

    ◄ Primary Topics Covered: Definition of hacking and how it applies beyond just computers Vulnerabilities and loopholes in societal institutions Ways to fix the systems to make them more beneficial to everyone, not just the powerful Examples of hacks in finance and politics The concept of a "Hacker's Mind" Using hacks to save money on travel The carried interest loophole Gerrymandering and the filibuster in US politics Hacks in sports and their impact Use of real estate as a loophole for money laundering Regulation and patching in financial systems Power dynamics and the role in using and preventing hacks. ◄ Episode Description On this episode of Forward Obsessed I speak with Bruce Schneier, an internationally renowned security technologist. He is the New York Times best-selling author of 14 books, including A Hacker's Mind -- as well as hundreds of articles, essays, and academic papers. His influential blog Schneier on Security is read by over 250,000 people. Schneier is a Lecturer in Public Policy at the Harvard Kennedy School, a faculty affiliate at the Ash Center for Democratic Governance and Innovation at HKS, a fellow at the Berkman-Klein Center for Internet and Society at Harvard University, a board member of the Electronic Frontier Foundation and AccessNow, and an advisory board member of EPIC and VerifiedVoting.org.  ◄ Episode Timestamps (00:00) Introduction to the podcast and guest, Bruce Schneier (00:58) Explanation of hacking beyond computer code (02:20) Power struggles in society and sports (03:27) Introduction to Bruce Schneier's book, "A Hacker's Mind" (04:06) "Hacking" societal institutions and vulnerabilities (05:10) The need for everyone to know more about hacking (06:01) Definition of "hacking" (07:47) Examples of hacks in finance and politics (09:52) History and examples of the filibuster (11:10) Hacks in sports (13:33) Bruce Schneier's personal hack for air travel (15:28) Real estate and anti-money laundering regulations (17:30) Patching financial systems (19:45) Power and hacks in society ◄ Episode Topic Score   Culture (10) Design (7) Education (9) Environment (4)  Science (6) Technology (8) ◄ Additional Episode Resources  Website:  https://www.schneier.com/ A Hacker’s Mind (Book): https://www.schneier.com/books/a-hackers-mind/ Click Here to Kill Everybody (Book): https://www.schneier.com/books/click-here/ Data And Goliath (Book): https://www.schneier.com/books/data-and-goliath/ Wikipedia Page: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bruce_Schneier  ◄ Engage with Type One Planet:  Website: www.typeoneplanet.net Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/typeoneplanet/ TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@typeoneplanet

    46 min
  7. 06/09/2023

    Taking Back Your Personal Data From Tech Companies ◄ Connor Borrego

    ◄ Primary Topics Covered: The emergence of new communication protocols in the Web Three movement, including encrypted messaging protocols that could replace email. The importance of user-owned data, choice, and optionality in operating the internet in Web Three. The need for easy-to-build websites and standardization of user data storage and sharing in Web Three. The ethical dilemma of personal data being collected and sold by big data companies without user consent in Web Three. The potential for crypto wallets to be monetized and undervalue user data in Web Three, and the importance of educating consumers on the value of their data. The potential of Bitcoin and blockchain technology to replace centralized server architectures beyond the financial industry. ◄ Episode Description Connor Borrego is a specialist in Web3, cryptocurrency, crypto wallet technology, an advocate for digital rights, and the CEO Playhaus, a smart wallet for content creators. On the internet, your virtual identity and your personal data do not belong to you - the vast amount of data that makes up your behaviors, your preferences, and your demographic information is the product that big data companies collect and sell to the highest bidder. In a world where significant parts of our lives exist solely on the internet, this practice has gone from behind the curtain to center stage, revealing a complex ethical problem that must be solved as the digital era begins to mature.  Imagine a world where your data, where your virtual identity, belongs to you. Where you have advanced yet simple to use tools to protect your data from prying eyes, and where you, and not a major corporation, have the ability to shop your own data out to the highest bidder.  In this interview, Connor Borrego presents real solutions on how to make this world possible, in which internet users can utilize encrypted browsers and crytowallets to “put a condom on their data,” and to open a direct line of communication with companies that would like to purchase data directly from the user. Let’s explore the alternatives to the big-data ecosystem, where the power is returned to the consumer.  Let’s discover an internet model that is technologically advanced, where policy is transparent, and where human beings may communicate and coexist equally, peacefully, and morally in a virtual environment.  ◄ Episode Timestamps (00:00) Introduction (3:42) Overview of different communication protocols emerging  (5:09) Explanation of Web Three movement and its focus on user-owned data, choice, and optionality in operating the internet   (8:19) Discussion on how encrypted messaging protocols may replace email   (14:20) Importance of easy to build websites in the context being discussed  (17:13) Overview of Brave browser and its privacy features  (19:20) Discussion on data ownership and how Web Three allows for standardization  (23:25) Ethical dilemmas surrounding personal data collection without consent  (27:42) Use of crypto wallets and their connection to Web Three blockchain websites  (32:18) Importance of educating consumers about the value of their data  (35:38) Origins of Bitcoin and how it works  (38:26) Potential use of blockchain technology beyond the financial industry  (41:15) Need for developers to focus on building a more equitable internet ◄ Episode Topic Score   Culture (7) Design (8) Education (9) Environment (4)  Science (5) Technology (10) ◄ Topical Keywords Web Three Cryptocurrency Digital identity Data ownership Encryption ◄ Additional Episode Resources  LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/connorborrego/ Playhaus: https://playhaus.agency/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/connorborrego ◄ Engage with Type One Planet:  Website: www.typeoneplanet.net Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/typeoneplanet/ TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@typeoneplanet

    51 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
3 Ratings

About

The purpose of this project is to help lay the foundational elements of becoming a Type One Planet. Watch Ep. 1 for information on what a Type One Planet is. This video podcast features interviews, round tables, debates, and collaborative sessions to ideate on concepts that will enable us to lay the foundation for becoming a Type One Planet. Each guest is a mission driven visionary, including inventors, scientists, and early entrepreneurs. Each interview is a deep exploration on the innovation, technology, or line of scientific study that the guest is pursuing.