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By Metaviews Media Management Ltd.
The podcast currently has 15 episodes available.
The pandemic has transformed work and learning, and this will be
particularly evident as we emerge into a post-pandemic world. One
person’s disruption is another person’s opportunity. Similarly some
organizations have responded with incredible resilience, and are
experiencing unprecedented growth and success.
Historically great crises and catastrophes are followed by renaissances
and periods of incredible innovation. What’s the difference between
success and failure, between depression and excitement? Talent. This is
true for both individuals and organizations.
How do you foster and harness your talent? How do organizations attract,
develop, and retain talent? These are crucial questions during this
transitional period as we remain in a pandemic but seek our path out of
it!
As a futurist and social designer, Andriana Lagoudes builds inclusive systems for sidelined people to unlearn their shame. Andriana does this by navigating and researching through complex political problems to design new code based on people’s best case scenario.
In this episode of Metaviews, Andriana joins host Jesse Hirsh to talk about the politics of the future, the politics of care, and why we're living in a moment where ethics may be more important than aesthetics.
To learn more about Andriana check out her website https://andrianalagoudes.com/
And follow her on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/andriana.lagoudes/
Vasiliki Bednar from Regs2Riches.com joins Jesse Hirsh to talk about the problems arising from copy and paste public policy. This is what happens when policy makers copy other jurisdictions blindly, rather than engage in a policy process that adapts to the needs of jurisdiction. Obviously policy makers can and should learn from each other and best practices, yet often the process is the purpose, and blindly copying others leads to problems down the road.
Business_Daddy is the name of a twitch user, artist, community organizer, chef, and brilliant intellectual. Their efforts to create community on twitch are both inspirational, but also controversial. In this tale of algorithmic injustice, we explore how on social media, you're often presumed guilty, without the opportunity to prove your innocence.
https://twitter.com/hotdoghalo
Alberto Cottica from the Science Fiction Economics Lab joins Jesse Hirsh to talk about Sociopathic Innovation and using science fiction to imagine alternate economic systems.
Alberto's essay on sociopathic innovation:
https://edgeryders.eu/t/sociopathic-innovation-how-we-are-investing-most-in-the-most-evil-technologies-long/15979
The science fiction economics lab:
https://scifieconomics.world/
Jesse Hirsh speaks with Reuben Christian about his work exploring the intersections of our culture while getting people together to experience joy. He argues we need more emotional literacy to better appreciate our shared humanity. If more people could meet themselves, perhaps we'd focus more on our presence, rather than our future.
https://www.instagram.com/reubenchristian1/
Vasiliki Bednar leads us on a discussion on the potential of public platforrms.
We have come to rightfully resent the propaganda of the gig economy that assures us platform companies are equitable when they tend to be exploitative. But they don’t have to be predatory. Other jurisdictions are experimenting with worker-owned platform co-operatives. It’s not too hard to imagine public sector platforms. Indeed, we must first re-imagine them as we consider whether they are worth investing in and building in-house.
There are plenty of places in the public sector that are characterized by matching problems that could be solved with an efficient platform designed with the public good in mind:
*The province has a lot of regulated professions, but that doesn’t mean that all of them are characterized by matching inefficiencies. Bike share programs are also a neat case study re: public investment and/or partnership in bike sharing infrastructure.
We have certain stereotypes that have come to be associated with platforms that we need to move past if we really want to reimagine them.
What is an ethical/responsible platform that benefits the very same labour that it showcases? Can they exist and persist with a modest profit margin as a non-profit or thrive as a worker-owned co-operative? Can members embrace higher price points that support livable wages and benefits?
The pandemic has empowered professionals to pursue a balance between life and work, leading many to move out of major cities to find refuge in rural communities. What does this shift mean for the future of work and the role of super cities? How should government policies support rural economic development while also investing in cities as economic engines? Is the Internet transforming where we work? Fibre optic internet is one obvious essential requirement, but so are robust transportation networks, and self-driving vehicles. Can we work anywhere and everywhere?
The ‘future of work’ is about more than work environments. The global challenge is to ensure that workers have the right resources to improve their lives, but to enable them to continue to work productively. For many this will mean the opportunity to live in a community that exists on a smaller, arguably human scale.
Chad Thiele is the founder of the AI Content Dojo, a group exploring the rise of GPT-3 powered automating writing and copy editing tools.
We spoke with him about the emerging industry forming around APIs like GPT-3 and other automated media tools.
Murley Herrle-Fanning joins us to discuss NFTs, crypto art, and virtual real estate.
As per usual, the reporting on this technology driven phenomena is misleading at best, entirely wrong at worst. Although I’m not convinced that this is a technology story per se, but rather an investing, or scam story. In so far as the Art world is a combination of the two.
For example the figures cited in NFT stories. Those numbers are incorrect, as they are translations. In most cases these transactions are not in dollars, they are in tokens, or ether, as that’s the whole point. These are blockchain transactions, and the purchases are happening in crypto-currency, linking their value with the value of Bitcoin, or Ether.
This is relevant because of who would already have this currency, or who would be in a position to acquire it relatively easily.
The appeal of such financing is understandable, if you’re willing to trust in this technology that seeks to automate trust.
Unfortunately there are ample reasons for us to distrust it.
For starters, while the blockchain is designed to verify that items uploaded to the blockchain are indeed those items, that doesn’t prevent someone from uploading something they do not have the rights to upload.
Or what about the environmental impact? Or the cultural logic driving this entire process.
We discuss all of this and more.
The podcast currently has 15 episodes available.