Oxford Internet Institute - Lectures and Seminars

Your Attention Please: Should human attention be treated as a scarce resource?


Listen Later

Tim Wu will discuss the science of attention, the history of the attention industries, and some of the harms caused by overharvesting. He will also propose a model of attention sovereignty of importance for the future. Rich or poor, man, woman or child, each of us has 168 hours per week: it is how we use that time that differentiates us. Yet we seem to live in an era where the daily demands made on our time and attention are greater than ever before. This is due both to advances in information technologies, and also the rise of Internet business models that depend on the sale of human attention. In this talk, Tim Wu will discuss the science of attention, the history of the attention industries, and some of the harms caused by overharvesting. He will also propose a model of attention sovereignty of importance for the future.
...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

Oxford Internet Institute - Lectures and SeminarsBy Oxford University

  • 3.5
  • 3.5
  • 3.5
  • 3.5
  • 3.5

3.5

4 ratings


More shows like Oxford Internet Institute - Lectures and Seminars

View all
John Locke Lectures in Philosophy by Oxford University

John Locke Lectures in Philosophy

33 Listeners

General Philosophy by Oxford University

General Philosophy

68 Listeners

Quantum Mechanics by Oxford University

Quantum Mechanics

20 Listeners

Archaeology by Oxford University

Archaeology

17 Listeners

Anthropology by Oxford University

Anthropology

73 Listeners

Philosophy for Beginners by Oxford University

Philosophy for Beginners

322 Listeners

Approaching Shakespeare by Oxford University

Approaching Shakespeare

324 Listeners

Aesthetics and Philosophy of Art lectures by Oxford University

Aesthetics and Philosophy of Art lectures

75 Listeners

The Secrets of Mathematics by Oxford University

The Secrets of Mathematics

41 Listeners

Theoretical Physics - From Outer Space to Plasma by Oxford University

Theoretical Physics - From Outer Space to Plasma

56 Listeners