244 episodes

Tech Policy Press is a nonprofit media and community venture intended to provoke new ideas, debate and discussion at the intersection of technology and democracy. The Sunday Show is its podcast.

You can find us at https://techpolicy.press/, where you can join the newsletter.

The Sunday Show Tech Policy Press

    • News
    • 4.8 • 22 Ratings

Tech Policy Press is a nonprofit media and community venture intended to provoke new ideas, debate and discussion at the intersection of technology and democracy. The Sunday Show is its podcast.

You can find us at https://techpolicy.press/, where you can join the newsletter.

    Securing Privacy Rights to Advance Civil Rights

    Securing Privacy Rights to Advance Civil Rights

    Subcommittee on Innovation, Data, and Commerce held a hearing: “Legislative Solutions to Protect Kids Online and Ensure Americans’ Data Privacy Rights.” Between the Kids Online Safety Act (KOSA) and the American Privacy Rights Act (APRA), both of which have bipartisan and bicameral support, Congress may be closer to acting on the issues than it has been recent memory.
    One of the witnesses that the hearing was David Brody, who is managing attorney of the Digital Justice Initiative of the Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights Under Law. Justin Hendrix caught up with Brody the day after the hearing, we spoke about the challenges of advancing the American Privacy Rights Act, and why he connects fundamental data to privacy rights to so many of the other issues that the Lawyers' Committee cares about, including voting rights and how to counter disinformation that targets communities of color.

    • 27 min
    The Societal Impacts of Foundation Models, and Access to Data for Researchers

    The Societal Impacts of Foundation Models, and Access to Data for Researchers

    This episode features two conversations. Both relate to efforts to better understand the impact of technology on society.
    In the first, we’ll hear from Sayash Kapoor, a PhD candidate at the Department of Computer Science and the Center for Information Technology Policy at Princeton University, and Rishi Bommasani, the society lead at the Stanford Center for Research on Foundation Models. They are two of the authors of a recent paper titled On the Societal Impact of Open Foundation Models.
    And in the second, we’ll hear from Politico Chief Technology Correspondent Mark Scott about the US-EU Trade and Technology Council (TTC) meeting, and what he’s learned about the question of access to social media platform data by interviewing over 50 stakeholders, including regulators, researchers, and platform executives.

    • 57 min
    Elon Musk's X Loses in Court: Why It Matters for Independent Technology Research

    Elon Musk's X Loses in Court: Why It Matters for Independent Technology Research

    Last week, a federal judge granted a motion to dismiss and strike a lawsuit brought by X Corp, formerly known as Twitter, against a nonprofit research outfit called The Center for Countering Digital Hate (CCDH).  To learn more about why the ruling matters, Justin Hendrix spoke to Alex Abdo, the litigation director at the Knight First Amendment Institute at Columbia University; Imran Ahmed, the CEO and founder of the Center for Countering Digital Hate; and Roberta Kaplan, a partner at the law firm of Kaplan, Hecker, and Fink, which represented CCDH in this matter. 

    • 54 min
    Nathan Schneider on Democratic Design for Online Life

    Nathan Schneider on Democratic Design for Online Life

    On this show, when we talk about technology and democracy, guests are often talking about the relationship between technology and existing democratic systems. Today's guest wants us to think more expansively about what doing democracy means and the role the technology can play in it. Nathan Schneider, an assistant professor of media studies at the University of Colorado Boulder, is the author of Governable Spaces: Democratic Design for Online Life.

    • 39 min
    Reforming Tech Amidst a Global Backlash Against Women's Rights

    Reforming Tech Amidst a Global Backlash Against Women's Rights

    Last year, researchers at Human Rights Watch wrote about the global backlash against women’s rights. In multiple countries, they say, hard-won progress has been reversed amidst a wave of anti-feminist rhetoric and policies, and it may take decades to reverse the trajectory. It’s against that backdrop that today’s guest pursues concerns at the intersection of tech and digital rights with women’s human rights. Justin Hendrix speaks with Lucy Purdon, the founder of Courage Everywhere and author of a recent report for the Mozilla Foundation titled "Unfinished Business: Incorporating a Gender Perspective into Digital Advertising Reform in the UK and EU."

    • 35 min
    Unpacking the Oral Argument in Murthy v Missouri

    Unpacking the Oral Argument in Murthy v Missouri

    On Monday, March 18, the US Supreme Court heard oral argument in Murthy v Missouri. In this episode, Tech Policy Press reporting fellow Dean Jackson is joined by two experts- St. John's University School of Law associate professor Kate Klonick and UNC Center on Technology Policy director Matt Perault- to digest the oral argument, what it tells us about which way the Court might go, and what more should be done to create good policy on government interactions with social media platforms when it comes to content moderation and speech.

    • 51 min

Customer Reviews

4.8 out of 5
22 Ratings

22 Ratings

JCASEA ,

Excellent

Timely and relevant podcast for all of us. One of my top 5 to listen to. Justin is always well-prepared and asks excellent questions. Thanks!

enelsonpa ,

Unregulated social media platforms contaminate our culture

Thanks to all of you for the discussion on the Joe Rogin/Spotfire situation, and how grifters use social media to drag down our discourse. This podcast is an inspiration for us all to do more to fight this.

Jrboho ,

Very biased podcast

As I expected, heavily left-biased podcast. Just listen to the questions in the twitter-files podcast. Basically asking the guest “you agree the twitter executives were doing their best in a difficult situation, right?” “Also, this disclosure does not mean much, right?” - Not sure if the maker of this podcast reads these reviews, but here we go: SHAME ON YOU - Why does the media insist in alienating conservatives? Your actions further divide America.

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