![]() ![]() That’s why we’re thrilled that Your Undivided Attention is joining the TED Audio Collective so we can share our learnings from inspiring leaders across sectors on what we can do together to catalyze a more humane future. “At Center for Humane Technology, we believe that technology that protects our well-being and unleashes the very best of humanity is possible. “The current technology ecosystem profits from attention, polarization and deepening extremism, but it doesn’t have to be this way,” said Tristan Harris, co-host of Your Undivided Attention and co-founder of Center for Humane Technology. Featuring in-depth conversations with academics, activists, and experts discussing the impact of technology in political, social and economic change, Your Undivided Attention centers around the urgent need for humane technology that supports our shared well-being and ability to tackle complex global challenges. Your Undivided Attention, a podcast from Center for Humane Technology, has joined the TED Audio Collective, a collection of podcasts for the curious.Ĭo-hosts Tristan Harris and Aza Raskin explore the incredible power that technology has over our lives - for good and for bad. Harris has briefed heads of state, technology company CEOs and members of the US Congress about the attention economy. In todays post, Aza Raskin responds to a readers question regarding the interface of Automated Teller Machines (ATM) and a quasimodal and more humane. His work has been featured on TED, "60 Minutes," HBO's "RealTime with Bill Maher," "PBS NewsHour," Recode, The Atlantic, WIRED, the New York Times, Der Spiegel, The Economist and many more. Rolling Stone magazine named Harris one of "25 People Shaping the World" in 2017. Drawing on literature from addiction, performative magic, social engineering, persuasive design and behavioral economics, he is currently developing a framework for ethical persuasion, especially as it relates to the moral responsibility of technology companies. ![]() Harris has spent a decade understanding the invisible influences that hijack human thinking and action. Prior to founding the new Center for Humane Technology, he was Google's Design Ethicist, developing a framework for how technology should "ethically" steer the thoughts and actions of billions of people from screens. ![]() Tristan Harris has been called "the closest thing Silicon Valley has to a conscience" by The Atlantic magazine. Tristan Harris helps the technology industry more consciously and ethically shape the human spirit and human potential. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |