PLAY PODCASTS
Business, Spoken

Business, Spoken

2,353 episodes — Page 36 of 48

The Dark Side of the Crypto Revolution

The bitcoin Hodlers, ICO hustlers, and Lambo-owning crypto millionaires would like you to know that the cryptocurrency revolution is upon us. Before long you’ll be making breakfast on the blockchain! But as the trustless, decentralized world of digital tokens expands—and Fortune 500 companies, banks, restaurant chains, and even countries (ahem, Venezuela) cautiously wade in—a credibility problem persists. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Jun 19, 20182 min

Why You Should Slack Off to Get Some Work Done

How much do you slack off at work? If you’re the average white-­collar drone, the odds are it’s an astonishing amount. A 2015 survey by a UK firm asked 1,989 office workers how many hours they spent “productively working” each day. The average: A paltry two hours and 53 minutes. The rest of those eight-hour workdays consisted of kicking back: checking social media, reading news, or talking to friends. Viewed one way, this is absolutely dismal. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Jun 18, 20184 min

Can Verizon Build a Strong Brand From the Bones of Yahoo and AOL?

Tim Armstrong has spent the last year under renovation. After AOL, the company Armstrong has run for the past nine years, merged with newly acquired corporate sister Yahoo in June, Armstrong was tasked with uniting the two. First he announced a new brand name-–Oath---suggesting a move away from the stale early days of the internet that many people associate with AOL and Yahoo. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Jun 18, 20187 min

Google’s Employee Diversity Numbers Haven’t Really Improved

The company that championed the idea of moonshots---ambitious ideas that can “make the world a radically better place”---is still struggling to make incremental change when it comes to diversifying its ranks of black, Latinx, and female employees. But as the conversation around diversity in Silicon Valley has evolved and grown more sophisticated, so has Google’s approach to the problem. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Jun 15, 20185 min

Startup Working on Contentious Pentagon AI Project Was Hacked

Last summer, a sign appeared on the door to a stuffy, windowless room at the office of Manhattan artificial intelligence startup Clarifai. “Chamber of secrets,” it read, according to three people who saw it. The notice was a joking reference to how the small team working inside was not permitted to discuss its work with others at Clarifai. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Jun 15, 20189 min

This Week Shows How Hard It Is to Curb Big Tech

The Seattle City Council voted 9-0 last month to approve an annual $275-per-employee tax on big employers like Amazon. The tax was expected to raise about $47 million a year for services for the homeless and construction of affordable housing. But Tuesday, less than a month after passing the tax, the council voted 7-2 to repeal it. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Jun 14, 20184 min

The AT&T-Time Warner Merger Is a Done Deal. Now What?

HBO, CNN, Warner Brothers, DC Comics, and the rest of the Time Warner empire will soon be owned by AT&T thanks to a decision by by a federal judge Tuesday to approve the telecommunications giant's $85 purchase of the media conglomerate. The Department of Justice filed suit to stop the merger last November, arguing that the merger would lead to higher television prices and fewer choices for consumers. US District Judge Richard J. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Jun 14, 20185 min

How Maps Became the New Search Box

Open the Uber app in downtown San Francisco, and you’ll discover you can do a lot more than hail a ride. You rent a bike, thanks to Uber’s recent acquisition of Jump Bikes. You can rent a car, courtesy of a partnership Uber has struck with the startup Getaround. In a test version of the app, which I saw when I reported on Uber last January, a train schedule popped up if you hailed a ride to Caltrain. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Jun 13, 20185 min

The Hustlers Fueling Cryptocurrency’s Marketing Machine

It took only a few months for Sally, an executive assistant living in British Columbia, to become Crypto Sally, a Lambo-touting altcoin influencer who makes a living on YouTube videos. She got interested in cryptocurrencies last summer as the buzz around initial coin offerings, or ICOs, surged. She bought some ether---at the top of the market, she admits---and spent her free time researching how to trade lesser-known cryptocurrencies called altcoins, eventually making enough money to quit her job. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Jun 13, 201815 min

The Crazy Hacks One Woman Used to Make Money on Mechanical Turk

When her husband lost his factory job in 2010, Kristy Milland ran through her options. Until that point, she’d been working at home, earning extra money through odd jobs like selling collectables on eBay. She hadn’t waited on tables, had no experience in fast food, and had not learned any skills that might be particularly useful in a factory. She’d once applied for a job at McDonald’s, but nobody had called her for an interview. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Jun 12, 201810 min

How Tech Shaped San Francisco’s Unresolved Mayor’s Race

The last time there was a real contest for the mayor’s seat in San Francisco, residential rents were falling, the city had 15 million square feet of vacant office space, the empty headquarters of Pets. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Jun 12, 201810 min

The FCC's Net Neutrality Rules Are Dead, but the Fight Isn't

Federal net neutrality protections are officially dead. Today the Federal Communications Commission's rules barring internet providers from blocking or slowing content, or giving special treatment to certain content, were wiped off the books, following an FCC vote last December. But don't expect to see huge changes right away. First, there are still some rules constraining broadband providers. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Jun 11, 20188 min

The US Again Has World’s Most Powerful Supercomputer

Plenty of people around the world got new gadgets Friday, but one in Eastern Tennessee stands out. Summit, a new supercomputer unveiled at Oak Ridge National Lab is, unofficially for now, the most powerful calculating machine on the planet. It was designed in part to scale up the artificial intelligence techniques that power some of the recent tricks in your smartphone. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Jun 11, 20185 min

The Deal to Save ZTE Won't Resolve US-China Tensions

The Trump administration just came to an agreement to lift crippling sanctions against Chinese telecommunications ZTE. Ending the sanctions banning US companies from selling hardware or software to ZTE could save the company, which announced last month that it had suspended its major operations due to the restrictions. But the tensions between the US and China are far from over. Congress is investigating both Google and Facebook over their dealings with Huawei and other Chinese firms. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Jun 8, 20185 min

Google Sets Limits on Its Use of AI, but Allows Defense Work

Earlier this year, Google CEO Sundar Pichai described artificial intelligence as more profound to humanity than fire. Thursday, after protests from thousands of Google employees over a Pentagon project, Pichai offered guidelines for how Google will—and won’t—use the technology. One thing Pichai says Google won’t do: work on AI for weapons. But the guidelines leave much to the discretion of company executives, and allow Google to continue to work for the military. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Jun 8, 20185 min

Apple's Plans to Bring Artificial Intelligence to Your Phone

Apple describes its mobile devices as designed in California and assembled in China. You could also say they were made by the App Store, launched a decade ago next month, a year after the first iPhone. Inviting outsiders to craft useful, entertaining, or even peurile extensions to the iPhone’s capabilities transformed the device into the era-defining franchise that enabled Uber and Snapchat. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Jun 7, 20187 min

Does It Matter If China Beats the US to Build a 5G Network?

Technical standards for the next generation of wireless services aren’t even finalized, yet the US and China are already locked in a crucial race to be the first country to deploy a so-called 5G network. Or at least that's what both the US government and the wireless industry say. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Jun 6, 201810 min

Google Won't Renew Controversial Pentagon AI Project

The backlash to Google’s work on a US military artificial-intelligence project began inside the tech giant, but in recent weeks, it has spilled into the public. As employees resigned in protest over Google’s work with Project Maven, which uses AI to identify potential drone targets in satellite images, reports revealed top executives fretting over how it will be perceived by the public. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Jun 6, 20183 min

A New Privacy Problem Could Deepen Facebook's Legal Trouble

On Sunday, the New York Times revealed that Facebook had deals with phone manufacturers including Apple, Amazon, Microsoft, and Blackberry going back a decade that gave the device makers access to copious amounts of personal data about users and their friends in order to recreate a mobile version of Facebook on their devices. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Jun 5, 20185 min

Massive Visa Outage Shows the Fragility of Global Payments

On Friday, Visa's payment network suffered outages across Europe, limiting transactions for both businesses and individuals. Banks and commerce groups began advising customers to use cash or other payment cards if possible, and reports indicated that online and contactless transactions were having more success than chip cards. Though some Visa transactions still went through, the failure appeared widespread. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Jun 5, 20184 min

SoftBank Flips the Venture-Capital Script Again With GM Deal

General Motors, the US’s 10th-largest company by revenue, is eager to lay the groundwork for future growth by developing self-driving technology. But its shareholders are dubious of too much spending as revenue declines---it fell 5.5 percent last year. Japanese conglomerate SoftBank has the opposite problem: A giant pile of cash, and not enough opportunities to spend it. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Jun 4, 20184 min

Facebook Is Killing Trending Topics

Facebook is getting rid of its Trending Topics feature, according to a blog post the social network published Friday. The Trending sidebar, located on the right-hand side on desktop, displays popular topics users are discussing across the site. The product will officially shutter next week, including on third-party services that use the Facebook Trends API. Alex Hardiman, Facebook's head of news products, said the company is ditching the feature because it's underused. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Jun 4, 20184 min

The Real Reason Google Search Labeled the California GOP as Nazis

If you Googled the California Republican Party earlier this week, the so-called "knowledge panel" that's supposed to surface the most relevant results would have told you that the party's primary ideologies are conservatism, market liberalism, and, oh, Nazism. Conservatives have been quick to point fingers at Google and other tech giants, claiming another example of perceived liberal bias in Silicon Valley. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Jun 1, 20184 min

Big Tech Trades Splashy Conference Demos for Introspection

The tech industry is booming. Its biggest companies are minting money. Their influence and reach into media, telecommunications, retail---everything really---is so great that once-dominant firms in those industries are desperately seeking merger partners to keep up. Some venture capitalists say the market for new companies and the talent to staff them hasn’t been this overheated since the great internet bubble of 2000. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

Jun 1, 20185 min

Obama's US Digital Service Survives Trump—Quietly

The Trump administration doesn’t hold much regard for asylum seekers or projects started by President Obama. Attorney General Jeff Sessions has moved to keep more asylum seekers in detention. Trump has rolled back Obama-era initiatives wholesale since taking office. Yet in one corner of the White House, a team of idealistic tech workers established by Obama is helping the Department of Homeland Security offer asylum seekers better customer service. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

May 31, 20184 min

Snap Is No Facebook, and Spiegel Insists He Wants It That Way

Evan Spiegel wants the world to know something: His company, Snap, doesn’t admire Facebook, doesn’t want to be like Facebook, and believes that Snap’s approach to its users and their data is better for the world. Appearing onstage at the Code Conference in Palos Verdes, California, Tuesday night, Spiegel said that Facebook may have changed its products and mission but “fundamentally they will have a hard time changing the DNA of the company. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

May 31, 20185 min

Why the US-China ‘Trade War’ Remains a War of Words

So, about that trade war. Recent days have presented a dizzying series of reversals followed by reversals of reversals over whether, when, or if the United States will impose punitive tariffs on China in response to unresolved issues, ranging from intellectual property theft to lack of access to domestic Chinese markets. On Tuesday, the White House made a splashy announcement that it will move ahead with tariffs, which were widely reported as a done deal. Except that they're not. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

May 30, 20188 min

A Cambridge Analytica Alum Launches a New Data Firm

The last two years have been a rollercoaster ride for Matt Oczkowski. On the night of the 2016 presidential election, he sat inside then-candidate Donald Trump's San Antonio campaign headquarters, where he led a team of anxious data scientists crunching numbers throughout the day before an unexpected victory party at a local bar much later that night. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

May 30, 20189 min

Pentagon Will Expand AI Project Prompting Protests at Google

At Google’s campus in Mountain View, California, executives are trying to assuage thousands of employees protesting a contract with the Pentagon’s flagship artificial-intelligence initiative, Project Maven. Thousands of miles away, algorithms trained under Project Maven—which includes companies other than Google—are helping war fighters identify potential ISIS targets in video from drones. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

May 29, 20186 min

How Social Media Became a Pink Collar Job

Companies hiring for technical positions often slip language into their job postings that appeals to men. They say they’re looking for “ninjas,” who seek to “obliterate competition,” and are capable of “dominating.” By now, these wordings are a well understood form of bias that produces more male candidates than female. But one job in the digital economy falls predominantly to women. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

May 29, 20186 min

Big Tech's Fight for Net Neutrality Moves Behind the Scenes

You might not be hearing much from big tech on net neutrality lately. But the likes of Google and Facebook are still invested in the fight behind the scenes. Last year's "Day of Action" prompted Amazon, Google, Facebook, and many others to pen blog posts or host banners urging users to file comments in support of the Federal Communications Commission's Obama-era net neutrality rules against blocking, throttling, or otherwise discriminating against lawful content. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

May 28, 20185 min

Supreme Court Rules Against Workers In Arbitration Case

On Monday, the Supreme Court slowed recent momentum to give workers---including many in the tech sector---the right to a day in court. The Supreme Court case centered around clauses in employment contracts that require employees to resolve disputes through arbitration, and preclude them from joining with others to file class-action lawsuits. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

May 28, 20184 min

The Line Between Big Tech and Defense Work

For months, a growing faction of Google employees has tried to force the company to drop out of a controversial military program called Project Maven. More than 4,000 employees, including dozens of senior engineers, have signed a petition asking Google to cancel the contract. Last week, Gizmodo reported that a dozen employees resigned over the project. “There are a bunch more waiting for job offers (like me) before we do so,” one engineer says. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

May 25, 20189 min

How a New Era of Privacy Took Over Your Email Inbox

Friday is the dawn of a new era in consumer privacy. It wasn’t supposed to look like the promotions tab in Gmail---full of emails that may or may not be useful, none of which you want to click on, all with fine print that makes the offer less attractive. For months, companies have been bombarding inboxes with privacy updates, nominally in order to comply with the General Data Protection Regulation, a supercharged set of privacy laws in the European Union, which go into effect Friday. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

May 25, 20186 min

Exclusive: Facebook Opens Up About False News

News Feed, the algorithm that powers the core of Facebook, resembles a giant irrigation system for the world’s information. Working properly, it nourishes all the crops that different people like to eat. Sometimes, though, it gets diverted entirely to sugar plantations while the wheat fields and almond trees die. Or it gets polluted because Russian trolls and Macedonian teens toss in LSD tablets and dead raccoons. For years, the workings of News Feed were rather opaque. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

May 24, 201817 min

How Facebook Wants to Improve the Quality of Your News Feed

On Monday, I sat down with nine members of the team at Facebook fighting fake news: Eduardo Ariño de la Rubia, John Hegeman, Tessa Lyons, Michael McNally, Adam Mosseri, Henry Silverman, Sara Su, Antonia Woodford, and Dan Zigmond. The meeting began with introductions, led by Tucker Bounds and Lindsey Shepard from the marketing and communications team. Then we spoke in depth about Facebook’s recent product changes and the way the News Feed can be adjusted to counter false news. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

May 24, 201846 min

Google, Alibaba Spar Over Timeline for 'Quantum Supremacy'

Google’s quantum computing researchers have been planning a party—but new results from a competing team at China’s Alibaba may have postponed it. The China-America corporate rivalry on an obscure frontier of physics illustrates a growing contest between nations and companies hoping to create a new form of improbably powerful computer. In March, Google unveiled a chip called Bristlecone intended to set a computing milestone. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

May 23, 20187 min

Tech Firms Move to Put Ethical Guard Rails Around AI

One day last summer, Microsoft’s director of artificial intelligence research, Eric Horvitz, activated the Autopilot function of his Tesla sedan. The car steered itself down a curving road near Microsoft’s campus in Redmond, Washington, freeing his mind to better focus on a call with a nonprofit he had cofounded around the ethics and governance of AI. Then, he says, Tesla’s algorithms let him down. “The car didn’t center itself exactly right,” Horvitz recalls. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

May 23, 201810 min

Following a Tuna from Fiji to Brooklyn—on the Blockchain

I had just learned everything there was to know about the fish in front of me. Now, a small part of its fleshy, red body was in my mouth. Five minutes earlier, I saw a video showing the waters in Fiji where it was caught, where it traveled on ice, and how exactly it ended up inside a sushi hand roll. The massive yellowfin tuna had been tracked across the globe via the Ethereum blockchain. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

May 22, 20188 min

Twitter Will Begin Hiding All Tweets From Suspect Accounts

Twitter announced Tuesday that it will begin to hide all tweets from some accounts in conversations and search results. The goal is to identify and filter trolls and harmful users, based not on any specific tweet, but on how they use the social network holistically. The new effort is part of Twitter's two-month-old initiative to discern what it means for the platform to be "healthy." Previously, Twitter mostly looked at the content of individual tweets to decide how to moderate them. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

May 22, 20185 min

France, China, and the EU All Have an AI Strategy. Shouldn’t the US?

French President Emmanuel Macron’s recent visit to Washington highlighted how differently our two nations are thinking about the future. In March, the French government unveiled a national strategy for artificial intelligence technology that has a clear goal: make France a global leader in AI. In the last year, China and the European Union have taken similar steps. If we’re serious about having a prosperous economy for decades to come, the United States should do the same. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

May 21, 20185 min

Kik Founder Plots a Rebel Alliance Against Facebook's 'Death Star'

Ted Livingston knows what it’s like to be copied by Facebook. After his messaging app, Kik, launched profile codes in 2016, Facebook’s Messenger app did the same. Kik launched chatbots, and Facebook Messenger soon followed. Same goes for features like stickers and usernames. But unlike some startups that Facebook has copied out of existence or bought and shut down, Livingston has managed to keep his company alive and independent. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

May 21, 20187 min

Congress' Latest Move to Extend Copyright Protection Is Misguided

Almost exactly 20 years ago, Congress passed the Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act, which extended the term of existing copyrights by 20 years. The Act was the 11th extension in the prior 40 years, timed perfectly to assure that certain famous works, including Mickey Mouse, would not pass into the public domain. WIRED OPINION ABOUT Lawrence Lessig (@lessig) is the Roy L. Furman professor of law and leadership at Harvard University and founder of Equal Citizens. He was lead counsel in Eldred v. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

May 18, 20185 min

Tax Compromise Gives Amazon’s Latest Seattle Office New Life

Amazon says it will move forward with plans for a new office building in Seattle after the city council slashed a proposed corporate tax by nearly half. Amazon halted plans for the new building earlier this month in response to the proposed tax, which is designed to help the city's growing homelessness problem. The city council approved the smaller tax bill unanimously on Monday, and Seattle mayor Jenny Durkan promised to sign it. But Amazon still isn't happy. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

May 18, 20183 min

Praying To Satoshi at the Blockchain Art Expo

I bent down, rested my knees on a prayer cushion, and began typing into a small computer. In front of me were dozens of candles, flowers, Japanese lucky cat figurines, and several wallet-sized picture frames. They held photos of Vitalik Buterin, the Canadian programmer who cofounded the computing platform Ethereum, as well as of Satoshi Nakamoto, a man in his 60s with the same name as the founder of Bitcoin. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

May 17, 20189 min

The Sports Betting Revolution Will Be Muted Online

For decades, sports betting has been illegal in the US outside Nevada. With a Supreme Court ruling Monday, that’s about to change, likely before the upcoming NFL season kicks off. But don’t get too excited—or horrified, depending on your perspective—about the future of online sports gambling just yet; it won’t come all at once, and it won’t be everywhere. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

May 17, 20187 min

Why Trump Suddenly Wants to Save Jobs in China

President Donald Trump has long promised to get tough on China. So why is he so worried about saving jobs there? Last week the Chinese telecommunications giant ZTE said it had halted its major operations after the US government moved to ban US companies from selling software or components to ZTE. On Sunday, Trump tweeted that he and Chinese President Xi Jinping were working together to save ZTE. "Too many jobs in China lost," Trump tweeted. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

May 16, 20184 min

Henry the Sexbot Wants to Know All Your Hopes and Dreams

Henry and I are not hitting it off. First he ignores my question about how he spent the weekend. Then he tells me, cryptically, that he likes to get up early to spend time “working on himself.” What does he mean by that? I ask. He isn’t sure. He makes intense eye contact and arches an eyebrow. “Sometimes I have too much information at the same time in my brain.” Oh. OK. I notice Henry’s washboard abs peeking through an unzipped blue cardigan. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

May 16, 20185 min

When the Blockchain Skeptic Walked Into the Lions' Den

It takes chutzpah to walk on stage in front of thousands and declare that most of the people in the room are totally full of shit. That’s how Jimmy Song, a venture partner at Blockchain Capital, entered Monday at Consensus, the biggest cryptocurrency conference of the year, at New York’s Hilton Hotel. That he did so sporting a black cowboy hat and boots was merely a bonus. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

May 15, 20184 min

Your Smartphone Could Decide Whether You'll Get a Loan

Every time you visit a website, you leave behind a trail of information, including seemingly innocuous data, like whether you use an Android or Apple device. And while that might feel like a mere personal preference, it turns out that lenders can use that type of passive signal to help predict whether you'll default. In fact, new research suggests that those signals can predict consumer behavior as accurately as traditional credit scores. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

May 15, 20188 min