

Business, Spoken
WIRED
Get in-depth coverage of current and future trends in technology, and how they are shaping business, entertainment, communications, science, politics, and society.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Mar 25, 2019 • 8min
The Very Mathematical History of a Perfect Color Combination
A couple of years ago, I fell in love with a color scheme: off-white text accented with a buttery yellow-orange and a neutral blue against a deep gray, the "color of television, tuned to a dead channel," to borrow a phrase from Neuromancer author William Gibson. The colors were part of a theme called "Solarized Dark" for the popular MacOS code editor TextMate. To be honest, I didn't think much of Solarized at first. But I soon found that I couldn't work with any other color scheme.
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Mar 22, 2019 • 8min
Why Tech Platforms Don’t Treat All Terrorism the Same
In January 2018, the top policy executives from YouTube, Facebook, and Twitter testified in a Senate hearing about terrorism and social media, touting their companies’ use of artificial intelligence to detect and remove terrorist content from groups like ISIS and Al Qaeda.
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Mar 22, 2019 • 9min
Facebook Changes Its Ad Tech to Stop Discrimination
On Tuesday, Facebook reached a historic settlement with civil rights groups that had accused the company of allowing advertisers to unlawfully discriminate against minorities, women, and older people by using the platform’s ad-targeting technology to exclude them from seeing ads for housing, jobs, and credit—three areas with legal protections for groups that have historically been disenfranchised.
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Mar 21, 2019 • 6min
Fei-Fei Li Wants AI to Care More About Humans
Fei-Fei Li, a Stanford professor renowned for her groundbreaking work in AI and neuroscience, emphasizes the need for a human-centered approach to artificial intelligence. She discusses her unforgettable experience hearing the sounds of a cat’s brain cells and advocates for ethical AI development in healthcare. Li highlights how AI can transform industries like manufacturing and agriculture while stressing the importance of a diverse workforce to address societal challenges. Her insights inspire a vision of AI that prioritizes human well-being.

Mar 21, 2019 • 5min
The EU Hits Google With a Third Billion-Dollar Fine. So What?
European officials Wednesday fined Google €1.49 billion ($1.7 billion) for more than a decade of abusive practices in how it brokered online ads for other websites like newspapers, blogs, and travel aggregators. This is the third billion-dollar antitrust penalty levied against Google by the European Commission, which has fined the company more than $9 billion for anticompetitive practices since 2017.
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Mar 20, 2019 • 5min
The Mosque Shooter Exploited the Power of the Internet
After each new horrific mass shooting, an all-too-familiar cycle often plays out: Reporters (myself included) race to attempt to unpack an alleged shooter’s possible motivations by piecing together clues from their social media accounts and online postings before it all gets scrubbed from the internet.
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Mar 20, 2019 • 7min
The Deeper Education Issue Under the College Bribery Scandal
The college admissions bribery scandal has all the components of a made for TV movie, including celebrity cameos, suspense, and unexpected twists and turns. Behind the broken admissions process and the drama, however, a different educational crisis is looming. According to a 2018 Korn Ferry study, by 2030, there could be a global talent shortage of more than 85.2 million people, costing an estimated $8.5 trillion in unrealized annual revenue. In the U.S. alone, the study forecasts $1.
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Mar 19, 2019 • 7min
The People Trying to Make Internet Recommendations Less Toxic
The internet is an ocean of algorithms trying to tell you what to do. YouTube and Netflix proffer videos they calculate you’ll watch. Facebook and Twitter filter and reorganize posts from your connections, avowedly in your interest—but also in their own. New York entrepreneur Brian Whitman helped create such a system.
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Mar 18, 2019 • 8min
How Cambridge Analytica Sparked the Great Privacy Awakening
On October 27, 2012, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg wrote an email to his then-director of product development. For years, Facebook had allowed third-party apps to access data on their users’ unwitting friends, and Zuckerberg was considering whether giving away all that information was risky. In his email, he suggested it was not: “I’m generally skeptical that there is as much data leak strategic risk as you think,” he wrote at the time.
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Mar 18, 2019 • 5min
With Tech on the Defensive, SXSW Takes an Introspective Turn
The first five days or so of SXSW in Austin are always dedicated to the “interactive” portion of the festival. The city’s downtown streets swell with lanyard-laden “entrepreneurs” and “founders” wearing that familiar uniform of T-shirts screen-printed with their company’s clever logo, an outfit made professional by throwing a blazer over the ensemble.
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