The Edge

California magazine

A podcast for surviving our modern world. With help from UC Berkeley experts, California magazine editors Laura Smith and Leah Worthington explore cutting-edge, often controversial ideas in science, technology, and society. Should you be able to choose your baby’s IQ? Are algorithms really smarter than people? As we face a planet devastated by climate change, what is the future of food? All that and more. A production of California magazine and the Cal Alumni Association. // Reported and hosted by Laura Smith and Leah Worthington; produced by Coby McDonald; artwork by Michiko Toki; original music by Mogli Maureal

  1. 2D AGO

    #34 Digital Infrastructure with Nicole Starosielski

    When you send a message to a friend—whether by text, email, or social media—you probably don’t think much about where it’s actually going. We’ve grown so accustomed to our free-floating devices and digital clouds and seemingly wireless connectivity that we might not realize just how wired our digital world truly is. The reality is, every message we send travels through a vast physical system: routers, cell towers, data centers, power grids, and miles of undersea and terrestrial fiber networks. And every part of it depends on human decisions. This means that the future of digital infrastructure depends not just on engineers but on policymakers, biologists, economists, designers, even journalists. But how do we bring all these people together? Nicole Starosielski, professor of Film and Media at UC Berkeley, is working on exactly that. She studies the hidden physical systems that make the internet possible—from undersea cables to global media networks to the environmental costs of connectivity—and is training a new generation of leaders who can navigate this field across all dimensions. Further reading: "Professor Nicole Starosielski (Film & Media) launches world's first certificate in internet infrastructure at Berkeley"UC Berkeley's Summer Minor and Certificate in Global Digital Infrastructure (GDI)This episode was written and hosted by Pat Joseph and Leah Worthington and produced by Coby McDonald.  Special thanks to Nicole Starosielski, Pat Joseph, and Nat Alcantara. Art by Michiko Toki and original music by Mogli Maureal. Additional music from Blue Dot Sessions. Support the show

    46 min
  2. APR 7

    #33 Talking to Whales with Gašper Beguš

    For decades, researchers believed that whales communicated using a sort of underwater Morse code—simple, repeated patterns of clicks. But recent advances in technology have revealed a much more complex, even human-like language. Now, with artificial intelligence, scientists are getting closer than ever to translating their vocalizations. UC Berkeley’s Gašper Beguš is one such researcher building advanced AI to learn and decipher sperm whale communication. But what happens when we crack the code? What might whales tell us—and what would be the practical, ethical, and legal implications of what we learn?  Further reading: Berkeley News - “UC Berkeley and Project CETI study shows sperm whales communicate in ways similar to humans”National Geographic - “Whales could one day be heard in court—and in their own words” National Geographic - “What are animals saying? AI may help decode their languages”Legal Paper - “What if We Understood What Animals Are Saying?: The Legal Impact of AI-Assisted Studies of Animal Communication”NYU More-Than-Human Rights report - “Listening to Our Animal Kin: Legal and Ethical Principles for Nonhuman Animal Communication Technologies”This episode was written and hosted by Leah Worthington and Nat Alcantara and produced by Coby McDonald.  Special thanks to Gašper Beguš, Pat Joseph, and Laura Smith. Art by Michiko Toki and original music by Mogli Maureal. Additional music from Blue Dot Sessions. Support the show

    29 min
  3. FEB 5

    #31 Bad Bunny with Petra Rivera-Rideau

    No doubt you’ve heard a thing or two about Bad Bunny recently. He’s a rapper, singer, and producer, also known as the “King of Latin Trap”—and reggaeton, of course—who’s soon to become the first solo Latino to headline the Super Bowl. But he’s also Benito Antonio Martínez Ocasio, a 31-year-old from Puerto Rico and an outspokenly political artist, using his platform and music to address humanitarian crises, gender-based violence, and political corruption. Our guest today is Petra Rivera-Rideau, an expert in music and racial politics who completed her Ph.D. at UC Berkeley and also holds the distinct honor of having taught the first-ever (as far as we know) course on Bad Bunny. She talks about her latest book, P FKN R: How Bad Bunny Became the Global Voice of Puerto Rican Resistance, Bad Bunny’s artistic and political legacy, and the rise of popstar-studies in academia.  Further reading: Book: P FKN R: How Bad Bunny Became the Global Voice of Puerto Rican ResistancebyPetra Rivera-RideauThe Bad Bunny Syllabus by Petra Rivera-Rideau and Vanessa Diaz Article: “How Bad Bunny Saved the Grammys” by Brady Brickner-Wood, The New YorkerVideo: “El Apagón” by Bad BunnyVideo: “TURiSTA” by Bad Bunny Video: “DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS” by Bad BunnyThis episode was written and hosted by Leah Worthington and Nat Alcantara and produced by Coby McDonald.  Special thanks to Petra Rivera-Rideau, Pat Joseph, and Laura Smith. Art by Michiko Toki and original music by Mogli Maureal. Additional music from Blue Dot Sessions. Support the show

    39 min
4.8
out of 5
29 Ratings

About

A podcast for surviving our modern world. With help from UC Berkeley experts, California magazine editors Laura Smith and Leah Worthington explore cutting-edge, often controversial ideas in science, technology, and society. Should you be able to choose your baby’s IQ? Are algorithms really smarter than people? As we face a planet devastated by climate change, what is the future of food? All that and more. A production of California magazine and the Cal Alumni Association. // Reported and hosted by Laura Smith and Leah Worthington; produced by Coby McDonald; artwork by Michiko Toki; original music by Mogli Maureal

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