Keen On
Andrew talks to the legendary Czech diplomat, writer and human rights activist Michael Zantovksy about how to fight authoritarianism.
info_outline Pivoting to the Killer-app.Keen On
Andrew talks with writer Larry Downes, the author of five books including this year’s bestselling Pivot To The Future. Best known, however, for his first book, Unleashing The Killer App, which, in 1998, sold 200,000 copies and was one of the first big hits about the internet.
info_outline Facebook’s Moral CrisisKeen On
The American technology journalist and impresario David Kirkpatrick is probably the world’s leading authority on the history of Facebook. The author of the 2010 best-selling Facebook Effect, over the last few years – become one of the Facebook most articulate critics.
info_outline Ninja Morality: The case for technological innovationKeen On
Andrew talks to Ninja Future author Gary Shapiro about our moral obligation to unleash technological innovation on society
info_outline Keen On The State of American DemocracyKeen On
Andrew talks to noted Harvard Law School scholar Noah Feldman about the health of American democracy, populism, anti-trust law and what James Madison would think of contemporary America.
info_outline How to Lose a Country With Turkish Author Ece TemelkuranKeen On
Today Andrew is talking to Turkish born author of How To Lose A Country, Ece Temelkuran. As global citizens we chat about her rejection of the parochial, cul-de-sac of identity politics and shows us how to engage in REAL democratic conversation.
info_outline Why Democracy Is a ConversationKeen On
Andrew talks to internet guru Jeff Jarvis about how to save democracy through turning it into a civil and civic discussion
info_outline Why Democracy needs Team HumanKeen On
Douglass Rushkoff is one of the world’s leading humanist critics of contemporary capitalism, particularly of the digital economy. In this week’s episode we chat about his latest acclaimed book is TEAM HUMAN.
info_outline How Globalism Is Turning Us All Into PalestiniansKeen On
Andrew talks to Ian Bremmer, author of the bestselling Us Vs Them: The Failure of Globalism about the political crises of inequality and alienation.
info_outline Finally Some Good News: Democracy works in Turkey!Keen On
Andrew talks to noted Turkish political pundit Soli Ozel about democracy in Turkey. Democracy works, Ozel says. Authoritarianism may even be on the wane.
info_outlineAs some of you will know, the little Baltic republic of Estonia is the world’s leading innovator of digital democracy. So today we talk with the country’s former CTO, Taavi Kotka, who many credit as the technological genius behind the construction of Estonian digital democracy.
So, as Taavi Kotka made unambiguously clear, we have two choices for engineering 21st century digital politics. It’s what he aptly called THE GREAT CHOICE. Either the centralized Chinese model controlled by an Orwellia actor like the Chinese state, communist party or leader. Or the decentralized Estonian model with its built-in checks and balances against Big Brother.
The choice is ours. Or, at least our governments. And it’s the choice that will determine the nature of democracy in the 21st century.
As Kotka explained, the Estonian model represents a new kind of social contract between the digital state and digital citizen in our age of big data. This social contract represents a digital kind of of transparency about accessing personal data. Yes, Kotka acknowledged, all our personal information will reside in some sort of giant database in the sky.
But, in the Estonian decentralized model, we will always be notified when a policeman or a tax officer or a politician looks at our data. And it’s this mutual transparency which distinguished the Estonian model from the unaccountable data dictatorship being constructed in China.
And then there is the third category of countries like the United States or Great Britain which are doing very little to create any kind of digital politics. What the hell are you still waiting for?” an incredulous Kotka asks about the US and UK – the two most notable laggards in any kind of digital innovation. Amen.
Perhaps there’s a fourth category too. Estonia and China represent kinds of bookends in the centralized and decentralized models of 21st century politics. But, as Kotka noted, some countries – like Austria or Singapore – are caught somewhere in between these two ideal types.
And he may be right to suggest that the smart city experiment in Singapore – with its highly effective technological reforms in education and healthcare – represents the best case of synthesizing the Chinese and Estonian models. Life is Good in Singapore, Kotka says. No, not perfect. But good.
What is clear is that what Taavi Kotka and his colleagues have engineered in Estonia is only the beginning of our collective 21st century digital political experiment. In Estonia’s digital democracy, he says, “we haven’t even started running AI”. And AI, he notes, changes everything because it enables what he calls a “future predictive model” for politics.
The most effective politicians of the future, he predicts, will use these predictive models to shape and execute their agenda. So Moneyball is coming to politics, he rightly predicts. And just as its revolutionized professionalized sports, it’s going to change everything about politics.
Hope you enjoyed this week’s episode with Taavi kotka, you can find out more about him here:
Here’s his talk from the DLD Conference Winter Is Coming!
Please be sure to check out DLD’s up and coming events,
Produced by Jason Sanderson - Podcast Tech