Tony Robbins: One of the most powerful things tech platforms could do is scale up the work that you're doing Tony, and just like now Facebook lets you mark yourself, I'm in a disaster, but mark myself as safe. Imagine if Facebook and Twitter and TikTok all had sort of prompts that if you're in a climate related disaster, then you record a video saying, I'm safe and here's how my life was affected or what I'm doing about it. That's an incredibly viral kind of story and piece of content that people are just hungry for. Those are some of the most hopeful things that I hear you say. We agree more than we actually think and we're under
We agree more than we think we do, but tech platforms distort our perceptions by amplifying the loudest, angriest and most dismissive voices online. In reality, they’re just a noisy faction. This Earth Day we ask Anthony Leiserowitz, Director of the Yale Program on Climate Change Communication, how he shifts public opinion on climate change. We’ll see how tech platforms could amplify voices of solidarity within our own communities. More importantly, we’ll see how they could empower 2 billion people to act in the face of global threats.