Saying I LOVE YOU To A CHATBOT? | Tristan Harris, Social Dilemma Star, Center for Humane Technology

preview_player
Показать описание
Whistleblower, Social Dilemma Star and Humane Technology Evangelist Tristan Harris talks to TDW about the Metaverse, toxic business models, attention as a superpower and the rise of virtualized relationships. Drop a comment with your thoughts - we'd love to hear from you!

Guest: Tristan Harris, TIME Magazine’s 100 “Next Leaders Shaping the Future,” creator of the wildly successful documentary The Social Dilemma, co-founder of the Center for Humane Technology, and co-host of the podcast Your Undivided Attention. Tristan drives a powerful narrative on why persuasive technology, the rise of social media, the metaverse, and our attention economy must be reformed and reimagined for our collective well-being.

Links to our exclusive conversation with Tristan here:

SUBSCRIBE to our YouTube channel HERE

LISTEN / SUBSCRIBE to our PODCAST HERE

JOIN the TDW Tribe and learn more HERE!
🙏 - Alex & Nate

CONNECT WITH TDW hosts, Alex Schwartz and Nate Thompson
✩ Support the Podcast - coming soon!

#metaverse #virtualreality #love #humanity #futureofwork #disruptedwork

ABOUT THE DISRUPTED WORKFORCE:

Are you ready to ADAPT and REINVENT YOURSELF for the most disrupted and digital workforce in history? What would it feel like to BELONG and not get STUCK?

It is estimated over 1 billion people will need reskilling by 2030, and more than 300 million jobs will be impacted by AI — work, identity, and what it means to be human are rapidly changing. Join hosts Nate Thompson and Alex Schwartz and the top voices in the Future of Work to uncover how to meet this dynamic new reality driven by AI, hybrid work, societal shifts, and our increasingly digital world. Discover why a Future of Work Mindset is your key to prepare, navigate and thrive!
Рекомендации по теме
Комментарии
Автор

Why does the host (not Tristan) suggest, near the end of the video, that 'its not the concern with innovation, it's not the concern with technology, those things are amazing and are radically reshaping the human experience in amazing ways'. Not sure what evidence suggests that these technologies are 'reshaping human experience in amazing ways' - how? Simply because you can do things faster and cut through space and time with our communication like never bf, does not necessarily make it 'amazing'. Are you suggesting that people now feel happier, more fulfilled, have better relationships than bf this wave of computerized technology? I don't think so.

gordonpepper