RadicalxChange(s) – Details, episodes & analysis
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RadicalxChange(s)
RadicalxChange Foundation
Frequency: 1 episode/59d. Total Eps: 28

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See all- https://www.humanetech.com/
113 shares
- https://www.radicalxchange.org/
52 shares
- https://thenetworkstate.com/
42 shares
- https://twitter.com/corpus1
36 shares
- https://twitter.com/m_t_prewitt
23 shares
- https://twitter.com/Shadowsweat
19 shares
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See allScore global : 73%
Publication history
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Janine Leger & Timour Kosters: Co-Founders of Edge City
Episode 22
mercredi 11 septembre 2024 • Duration 47:55
Join host Matt Prewitt in an inspiring conversation with Edge City co-founders Janine Leger and Timour Kosters, as they dive into the transformative world of pop-up villages and cities. Discover the story behind Edge City's latest experiment, Edge Esmeralda, and learn how temporary communities are reshaping the way we live and work. Janine and Timour share their passion for experimentation, collaboration, co-creation, and their vision for building healthier, more dynamic environments.
From the Whole Earth Catalog to the Chautauqua movement, this episode explores the rich history of pop-up communities while introducing groundbreaking ideas like community currencies ("∈dges") and iterative social technologies. Tune in for an engaging and forward-thinking discussion that reveals fresh perspectives on the future of community building, collaboration, and social innovation. Don’t miss this illuminating discussion!
Links & References:
References:
- About Edge City
- Edge Esmeralda Recap
- Why I Built Zuzalu by Vitalik Buterin | Palladium Magazine
- 2023: First Zuzalu
- Balaji Srinivasan’s on network states: The Network State
- Digital nomad - Wikipedia
- Whole Earth Catalog - Wikipedia
- Back-to-the-land movement - Wikipedia
- Burning Man - Wikipedia
- Michel Bauwens - Wikipedia
- Chautauqua - Wikipedia
- “Scenius” = Scenes of genius
- RadicalxChange(s) | Barry Threw: Executive & Artistic Director of Gray Area
- Secret Societies, Network States, Burning Man, Zuzalu, and More - RadicalxChange
- Edges: A Plural Money Experiment - RadicalxChange
- Plural Money: A New Currency Design - RadicalxChange
Bios:
Janine Leger is the co-founder of Edge City, an organization that convenes leaders and builders across tech, science, and society in pop-up villages around the globe. Previously, she co-created Zuzalu and led the Public Goods Funding team at Gitcoin.
Timour Kosters is also a co-founder of Edge City. Prior, he spent ten years building and investing in startups, including Artsy, the largest online art marketplace; Kama, a leading health-tech app; and Impact, an impact-focused social media brand. He was most recently a partner at Seed Club Ventures.
Links:
Janine and Timour’s Social Links:
- Janine Leger (@JanineLeger) / X
- timour kosters (@timourxyz) / X
- Edge City (@JoinEdgeCity) / X
- Edge City
Matt Prewitt (he/him) is a lawyer, technologist, and writer. He is the President of the RadicalxChange Foundation.
Matt’s Social Links:
Production Credits:
- Produced by G. Angela Corpus.
- Co-Produced and Audio Engineered by Aaron Benavides.
- Executive Produced by G. Angela Corpus and Matt Prewitt.
- Intro/Outro music by MagnusMoone, “Wind in the Willows,” is licensed under an Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 International License (CC BY-NC-SA 3.0)
This is a RadicalxChange Production.
Connect with RadicalxChange Foundation:
Frank McCourt: Founder of Project Liberty (Part II)
Episode 21
dimanche 28 juillet 2024 • Duration 01:15:55
In this episode, Project Liberty Founder Frank McCourt joins Matt for a second round to discuss the challenges and opportunities presented by rapidly developing AI technologies. Building on their previous chat about digital infrastructure, they explore whether AI will exacerbate social media, digital advertising, and data centralization issues, or fundamentally change them. McCourt emphasizes fixing the internet’s design flaws to ensure AI benefits society, advocates for returning data ownership to individuals and stresses the need for political engagement to align AI with democratic values. Tune in for this enlightening conversation and what we can do moving forward.
Links & References:
References:
- RadicalxChange(s) | Frank McCourt: Founder of Project Liberty (Part I) on Reclaiming the Internet
- Khmer Empire | Wikipedia
- The Decline of the Khmer Empire | National Library of Australia
- Restrictions on TikTok in the United States | Wikipedia
- TikTok sues to block prospective US app ban | CNN Business
- How Silicon Valley gamed the world's toughest privacy rules - POLITICO
- European Union fines Meta $1.3 billion for violating privacy laws : NPR
- The Dangers of the Global Spread of China’s Digital Authoritarianism | Center for a New American Security (en-US)
- China’s Techno-Authoritarianism Has Gone Global | Human Rights Watch
- China trying to develop world ‘built on censorship and surveillance’ | Privacy News | Al Jazeera
- Project Liberty
- People’s Bid For TikTok - Project Liberty
Bios:
Frank H. McCourt, Jr. is a civic entrepreneur and the executive chairman and former CEO of McCourt Global, a private family company committed to building a better future through its work across the real estate, sports, technology, media, and capital investment industries, as well as its significant philanthropic activities. Frank is proud to extend his family’s 130-year legacy of merging community and social impact with financial results, an approach that started when the original McCourt Company was launched in Boston in 1893.
He is a passionate supporter of multiple academic, civic, and cultural institutions and initiatives. He is the founder and executive chairman of Project Liberty, a far-reaching, $500 million initiative to transform the internet through a new, equitable technology infrastructure and rebuild social media in a way that enables users to own and control their personal data. The project includes the development of a groundbreaking, open-source internet protocol called the Decentralized Social Networking Protocol (DSNP), which will be owned by the public to serve as a new web infrastructure. It also includes the creation of Project Liberty’s Institute (formerly The McCourt Institute,) launched with founding partners Georgetown University in Washington, D.C., Stanford University in Palo Alto, CA, and Sciences Po in Paris, to advance research, bring together technologists and social scientists, and develop a governance model for the internet’s next era.
Frank has served on Georgetown University’s Board of Directors for many years and, in 2013, made a $100 million founding investment to create Georgetown University’s McCourt School of Public Policy. He expanded on this in 2021 with a $100 million investment to catalyze an inclusive pipeline of public policy leaders and put the school on a path to becoming tuition-free.
In 2024, Frank released his first book, OUR BIGGEST FIGHT: Reclaiming Liberty, Humanity, and Dignity in the Digital Age.
Frank’s Social Links:
- Project Liberty
- Project Liberty (@pro_jectliberty) / X
- Project Liberty (@pro_jectliberty) • Instagram
- McCourt Institute (@McCourtInst) / X
Matt Prewitt (he/him) is a lawyer, technologist, and writer. He is the President of the RadicalxChange Foundation.
Matt’s Social Links:
Production Credits:
- Produced by G. Angela Corpus and Matt Prewitt.
- Co-Produced and Audio Engineered by Aaron Benavides.
- Executive Produced by G. Angela Corpus and Matt Prewitt.
- Intro/Outro music by MagnusMoone, “Wind in the Willows,” is licensed under an Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 International License (CC BY-NC-SA 3.0)
Additional Credits:
- This episode was recorded by Matt Prewitt.
This is a RadicalxChange Production.
Connect with RadicalxChange Foundation:
Shrey Jain: Applied Scientist at Microsoft Research Special Projects
Episode 12
vendredi 24 mars 2023 • Duration 01:10:32
Shrey Jain, an applied scientist at Microsoft Research Special Projects, speaks with Matt Prewitt on a very timely and topical subject: AI and – more specifically – the dangers it poses to the nature of natural human communication (“context collapse”). They take a deep dive into the current threats to privacy by expanding beyond the often discussed cryptographic sense into “privacy as contextual integrity”, and the immediate opportunity to embed ethical guardrails into this ever-changing realm of generative AI through possible solutions of designated verified signatures in “plural publics”.
Shrey’s recently published paper co-authored with Divya Siddarth and E. Glen Weyl “Plural Publics” is linked in the episode notes.
Links & References:
- Georg Simmel and The Sociology of Secrecy and of Secret Societies
- John Dewey on The Public and Its Problems: An Essay in Political Inquiry on JSTOR
- Scamming in AI via The Washington Post - They thought loved ones were calling for help. It was an AI scam.
- "Privacy as Contextual Integrity" by Helen Nissenbaum
- Also see: Privacy in Context: Technology, Policy, and the Integrity of... (book)
- Jaron Lanier on How to Fix Twitter—And All of Social Media - The Atlantic
- AI Education - Will ChatGPT Kill the Student Essay? - The Atlantic
- Shrey Jain, Divya Siddarth, and E. Glen Weyl. “Plural Publics.” Edmond & Lily Safra Center for Ethics, Harvard University, March 20, 2023.
Bios:
Shrey Jain (he/him) is an Applied Scientist at Microsoft Research Special Projects. His research area is AI Security and Cryptography with a specific focus on information integrity in an era of generative AI. Shrey's work has been featured in CBC News, The Globe and Mail, Financial Times, National Post, CTV News, and the Toronto Star.
Shrey’s Social Links:
Twitter: @shreyjaineth
Connect with Shrey on LinkedIn
Shrey’s Substack: Glasswing
Matt Prewitt (he/him) is a lawyer, technologist, and writer. He is President of the RadicalxChange Foundation.
Matt’s Social LInks:
Twitter: @m_t_prewitt
Matt’s Substack: Matt's Writings
Production Credits:
- Produced by G. Angela Corpus.
- Co-Produced and Audio Engineered by Aaron Benavides.
- Executive Produced by G. Angela Corpus and Matt Prewitt.
- Intro/Outro music by MagnusMoone, “Wind in the Willows,” is licensed under an Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 International License (CC BY-NC-SA 3.0)
This is a RadicalxChange Production.
Connect with RadicalxChange Foundation:
Partial Common Ownership/Plural Property: In Conversation with Will Holley, Graven Prest, Kevin Seagraves
Episode 11
vendredi 10 février 2023 • Duration 01:16:34
In today's episode, Will Holley (Founder of 721 Labs), Graven Prest (Co-Founder of the Geo Web project), and Kevin Seagraves (CEO of NiftyApes) are three mission-focused entrepreneurs who join host Matt Prewitt in a roundtable discussion on the topic of Plural Property — RadicalxChange's umbrella term for Partial Common Ownership, Harberger Taxation, Self-Assessed Licenses Sold via Auction or SALSA, and Common Ownership Self-Assessed Tax or COST.
NOTE: This is a regular season episode of the RadicalxChange(s) podcast. Our mini season of "A New Era of Democracy" will continue following this episode.
Links for Today’s Episode:
Will Holley (he/him) is the founder of 721 Labs, a research and development company focused on Ethereum token standards and mechanism design. He is also the founder of CityDAO’s Network City initiative, the first IRL experiment using Partial Common Ownership, Harberger Taxes and Quadratic Funding to coordinate efficient private market funding of public goods. Will first engaged with Radical ideas and Web3 in 2020, after selling his last startup, a collectibles marketplace. A software engineer by training, Will previously worked in the fine art world, building machine learning models to predict auction results for Sotheby’s and Christie’s.
Graven Prest (he/him) is an entrepreneur and mechanism designer in the Web3 space. He's the co-founder of the Geo Web project (@TheGeoWeb)—an open protocol that creates consensus for browsing digital media anchored to physical locations (i.e. geospatial augmented reality). The network protocol uses partial common ownership to administer its digital land market and fund public goods.
Kevin Seagraves (he/him) has been building in the Ethereum ecosystem since 2017. He was the lead engineer of Gitcoin Grants v0, co-author of EIP-1337, and a co-founder of the ETHSecurity community. Later, he went on to lead product at Charge before returning to the Gitcoin family and contributing to the Moonshot Collective and Scaffold-eth. He is now the CEO at NiftyApes, building tools for NFT traders, and is the creator of Harberger Style Lending Auctions.
Matt Prewitt (he/him) is a lawyer, technologist, and writer. He is President of the RadicalxChange Foundation.
Production Credits
- Produced by G. Angela Corpus.
- Co-Produced and Audio Engineered by Aaron Benavides.
- Executive Produced by G. Angela Corpus and Matt Prewitt.
- Intro/Outro music by MagnusMoone, “Wind in the Willows,” is licensed under an Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 International License (CC BY-NC-SA 3.0)
This is a RadicalxChange Production.
Connect with RadicalxChange Foundation:
A New Era of Democracy Ep. 3 | Zizi Papacharissi
Episode 10
mardi 22 novembre 2022 • Duration 01:17:36
This episode is a continuation of a mini season of RadicalxChange(s) titled A New Era of Democracy.
In today’s episode, we welcome Professor of Communications and Political Science Zizi Papacharissi who discusses her latest book, After Democracy with host Matt Prewitt. In this thought-provoking conversation, they examine how social media affects our culture, our relationships, and consequently our democratic processes, while exploring potential ways to imagine new and better forms of democracy by “living with technology, not through technology.”
Zizi Papacharissi, PhD, is Professor and Head of the Communication Department, Professor of Political Science at the University of Illinois-Chicago, and a University Scholar at the University of Illinois System. Her work focuses on the social and political consequences of online media. She has published nine books, over 70 journal articles and book chapters, and serves on the editorial board of fifteen journals. Zizi is the founding and current Editor of the open access journal Social Media & Society. She has collaborated with Apple, Facebook, Microsoft, and Oculus, and has participated in closed consultations with the Obama 2012 election campaign. She sits on the Committee on the Health and Well-Being of Young Adults, funded by the National Academies of Science, the National Research Council, and the Institute of Medicine in the US, and has been invited to lecture about her work on social media in several Universities and Research Institutes in Europe, Asia, Africa, and the Americas. Her work has been translated in Greek, German, Korean, Chinese, Hungarian, Italian, Turkish, and Persian. Her 10th book, titled After Democracy: Imagining our Political Future, is out now, from Yale University Press.
Matt Prewitt is a lawyer, technologist, and writer. He is President of the RadicalxChange Foundation.
Production Credits
- Originally produced by G. Angela Corpus and Aaron Benavides for 2021 RxC Annual Conference RxC TV program.
- Produced by G. Angela Corpus.
- Co-Produced and Audio Engineered by Aaron Benavides.
- Executive Produced by G. Angela Corpus, Jennifer Morone, and Matt Prewitt.
- Intro/Outro music by MagnusMoone, “Wind in the Willows,” is licensed under an Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 International License (CC BY-NC-SA 3.0)
This is a RadicalxChange Production.
Connect with RadicalxChange Foundation:
Christine Lemmer-Webber: CTO of Spritely Institute, ActivityPub Co-Editor, and User Freedom Activist
Episode 9
jeudi 21 juillet 2022 • Duration 01:40:19
In this exciting episode, Matt Prewitt speaks with the inquisitive and captivating Christine Lemmer-Webber, who is CTO of the Spritely Institute and whose lifelong work focuses on advocating user freedom. This philosophical and technical discussion focuses on the many ways to look at ethical methods of building technology without usurping the free agency of others; a pluralistic view of examining technical design with different lenses.
NOTE: This is a regular season episode of the RadicalxChange(s) podcast. Our mini season of "A New Era of Democracy" will continue following this episode.
Things Mentioned:
- Spritely Institute
- Scheme Primer from Spritely Institute
- Randy Farmer!
- FOSS and Crafts podcast (hosted by Christine Lemmer-Webber and Dr. Morgan Lemmer-Webber)
- The terms "context collapse" and "collapsed contexts" (the latter coined by technology and social media scholar danah boyd in the early 2000s).
- Neohabitat game
- Christine gives a shout-out to Leilani Gilpin's paper on accountability layers (re: machine learning systems)
- Donate to the Spritely Institute! Funders email [email protected].
Christine Lemmer-Webber (she/they) has devoted her life to advancing user freedom. She founded the MediaGoblin project because she believes that in order to allow people to express their agency, putting networking technology in the hands of users in a way that empowers them is fundamental. Realizing that the federated social web was fractured by a variety of incompatible protocols, she co-authored and shepherded ActivityPub's standardization, which as of 2020, is the most popular and widely deployed web-based decentralized social network protocol to date. Christine established the open-source Spritely Project to solve known problems in existing centralized and decentralized social media platforms and to re-imagine the way we build networked applications - work that now continues here at the Spritely Institute under her guidance as CTO.
Matt Prewitt (he/him) is a lawyer, technologist, and writer. He is President of the RadicalxChange Foundation.
Production Credits
- Produced by G. Angela Corpus.
- Co-Produced and Audio Engineered by Aaron Benavides.
- Executive produced by G. Angela Corpus, Jennifer Morone, and Matt Prewitt.
- Intro/Outro music by MagnusMoone, “Wind in the Willows,” is licensed under an Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 International License (CC BY-NC-SA 3.0)
This is a RadicalxChange Production.
Connect with RadicalxChange Foundation:
A New Era of Democracy Ep. 2 | Anasuya Sengupta
Episode 8
jeudi 7 avril 2022 • Duration 01:17:30
This episode is part of a mini season of RadicalxChange(s) titled A New Era of Democracy.
Lauded poet, author, and activist Anasuya Sengupta joins Matt Prewitt on this episode to discuss the culture of Wikipedia, the embedded power dynamics of digital technologies, and how plurality plays a role in empowering the global South's presence on the internet.
Links:
- State of the Internet’s Languages Report | Whose Knowledge?
- State of the Internet’s Languages website
Anasuya Sengupta (@anasuyashh) is Co-Founder and Co-Director of Whose Knowledge?, a global multilingual campaign to center the knowledge of marginalized communities (the minoritized majority of the world) online. She’s led initiatives across the global South, and internationally for over 20 years, to collectively create feminist presents and futures of love, justice, and liberation. She is committed to unpacking issues of power, privilege, and access, including her own as an anti-caste savarna woman. Anasuya is the former Chief Grantmaking Officer at the Wikimedia Foundation and former Regional Program Director at the Global Fund for Women. She was a 2017 Shuttleworth Foundation Fellow and received a 2018 Internet and Society award from the Oxford Internet Institute. She is on the Scholars’ Council for UCLA’s Center for Critical Internet Inquiry, and the advisory committee for MIT’s Center for Research on Equitable and Open Scholarship (CREOS).
Matt Prewitt (@m_t_prewitt) is a lawyer, technologist, and writer. He is President of the RadicalxChange Foundation.
Credits
- Originally produced by Aaron Benavides for 2021 RxC Annual Conference RxC TV program.
- Produced by G. Angela Corpus.
- Co-Produced and Audio Engineered by Aaron Benavides.
- Executive produced by G. Angela Corpus, Jennifer Morone, and Matt Prewitt.
- Intro/Outro music by MagnusMoone, “Wind in the Willows,” is licensed under an Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 International License (CC BY-NC-SA 3.0)
This is a RadicalxChange Production.
Connect with RadicalxChange Foundation:
A New Era of Democracy Ep. 1 | Audrey Tang and Jo Guldi with Rosa O’Hara
Episode 7
mercredi 23 février 2022 • Duration 01:05:55
This episode is part of a mini season of RadicalxChange(s) titled A New Era of Democracy.
Rosa O’Hara moderates a discussion between Audrey Tang and Jo Guldi on Taiwan’s expeditious response to the COVID-19 pandemic, the history of the g0v movement, the democratic power of embracing new forms of civic technology, and more.
Audrey Tang (@audreyt) is Taiwan’s Digital Minister in charge of Social Innovation. She is known for revitalizing the computer languages Perl and Haskell, as well as for building the online spreadsheet system EtherCalc in collaboration with Dan Bricklin. In the public sector, she has served on the Taiwan National Development Council’s open data and K-12 curriculum committees and has led the country’s first e-Rulemaking project. In the private sector, Audrey has worked as a consultant with Apple on computational linguistics, with Oxford University Press on crowd lexicography, and with Socialtext on social interaction design. In the social sector, Audrey actively contributes to g0v (“gov zero”), a vibrant community focusing on creating tools for the civil society, with the call to “fork the government.”
Jo Guldi, PhD. (@joguldi) is an Associate Professor of History at Southern Methodist University, where she teaches courses on the history of Britain, the British Empire, modern development policy, and property law. She has published many articles about digital history methods, participatory mapping, and the history of eviction and rent control in Britain and its empire. She is a former Junior Fellow at the Harvard Society of Fellows and Hans Rothfels Assistant Professor of History, Brown University. Her latest book The Long Land War is about the definitive history of ideas about land redistribution, allied political movements, and their varied consequences around the world. She lives in Richardson, Texas.
Rosa O’Hara (@RosaO_Hara) is a staff writer for Noema Magazine. She previously worked had staff jobs editing for The Washington Post and HuffPost, was a contributing reporter for Newsday (NYC), and reported for The Jakarta Globe (Indonesia). She is based in Brooklyn, NY.
Credits
- Originally produced by Paula Berman and Rachel Knoll for 2021 RxC Annual Conference RxC TV program.
- Produced by G. Angela Corpus, Jennifer Morone, and Matt Prewitt.
- Co-Produced and Audio Engineered by Aaron Benavides.
- Intro/Outro music by MagnusMoone, “Wind in the Willows,” is licensed under an Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 International License (CC BY-NC-SA 3.0)
This is a RadicalxChange Production.
Connect with RadicalxChange Foundation:
James Evans: Computational Social Scientist, Knowledge Lab Director, and Professor at UChicago
Episode 6
mardi 10 août 2021 • Duration 01:29:53
In this conversation with James A. Evans, we examine the relationship between artificial intelligence and democracy, the tradeoffs between hybridization and speciation, and much more.
James is a professor at the University of Chicago, director of its Knowledge Lab, and external professor at the Santa Fe Institute. His research focuses on the collective system of thinking and knowing, ranging from the distribution of attention and intuition, the origin of ideas and shared habits of reasoning to processes of agreement (and dispute), accumulation of certainty (and doubt), and the texture—novelty, ambiguity, topology—of understanding. James is especially interested in innovation—how new ideas and practices emerge—and the role that social and technical institutions (e.g., the Internet, markets, collaborations) play in collective cognition and discovery. Much of his work has focused on areas of modern science and technology. Still, he is also interested in other knowledge domains—news, law, religion, gossip, hunches, machine and historical modes of thinking and knowing. He supports the creation of novel observatories for human understanding and action through crowdsourcing, information extraction from text and images, and the use of distributed sensors (e.g., RFID tags, cell phones). He uses machine learning, generative modeling, social and semantic network representations to explore knowledge processes, scale up interpretive and field methods, and create alternatives to current discovery regimes.
Before Chicago, he received his doctorate in sociology from Stanford University, served as a research associate in the Negotiation, Organizations, and Markets group at Harvard Business School, started a private high school focused on project-based arts education, and completed a B.A. in Anthropology at Brigham Young University.
Credits
- Production by Jennifer Morone, Leon Erichsen, and Matt Prewitt
- Editing and Sound Engineering by Jennifer Morone
- Intro/Outro music by MagnusMoone, “Wind in the Willows,” is licensed under an Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 International License (CC BY-NC-SA 3.0)
Connect with RadicalxChange Foundation:
Jo Guldi and Brent Hecht: Maps, Computers, and Other Abstractions - Information Infrastructure and Legitimacy
Episode 5
lundi 28 juin 2021 • Duration 01:16:05
This episode ended up being a wide-ranging discussion that surfaced essential ideas about getting more thoughtful about the boundary between public and private power by understanding what’s infrastructure and what isn’t. The seed for this conversation was whether we should understand Google’s index of pages as a form of public infrastructure and, if so, why. This question could hardly be more relevant as public infrastructure investments dominate the conversation in the United States. But perhaps we need to broaden our view from physical infrastructure to informational infrastructure, which might indeed be even more critical.
Jo Guldi is a scholar of the history of Britain and its empire who is especially involved in questions of state expansion, the contestation of property under capitalism, and how state and property concepts are recorded in the landscape of the built environment. These themes informed her first book, Roads to Power, which examined Britain’s interkingdom highway and its users from 1740 to 1848. They also inform her current research into rent disputes and land reform for her next monograph, The Long Land War, which profiles three moments in the history of property: the Irish Land Court of 1881 and its invention of rent control; the ideology of “squatting” in post-1940 Britain; and the creation of the “participatory map” for contesting legal boundaries in Britain and India in the 1970s and 80s.
Brent J. Hecht received a Ph.D. in computer science from Northwestern University, a Master’s degree in geography from UC Santa Barbara, and a Bachelor’s degree in computer science and geography from Macalester College. At Northwestern, Dr. Hecht holds appointments in the Department of Computer Science and the School of Communication. He is the recipient of a CAREER award from the U.S. National Science Foundation. He has received awards for his research at top-tier publication venues in human-computer interaction, data science, and geography (e.g., ACM SIGCHI, ACM CSCW, ACM Mobile HCI, AAAI ICWSM, COSIT). Dr. Hecht also serves on the Executive Committee of ACM FAccT (formerly ACM FAT*), the premier publication venue for understanding and mitigating societal biases in artificial intelligence systems. Dr. Hecht has collaborated with Google Research, Xerox PARC, and Microsoft Research. His work has been featured by The New York Times, the Washington Post, Le Monde, Der Spiegel, and various other TV, radio, and Internet outlets.
Book links
- Algorithms of oppression by Safiya Umoja Noble
- Data Feminism by Catherine D’Ignazio and Lauren F. Klein
Credits
- Production by Jennifer Morone, Leon Erichsen, and Matt Prewitt
- Editing and Sound Engineering by Jennifer Morone
- Intro/Outro music by MagnusMoone, “Wind in the Willows,” is licensed under an Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 International License (CC BY-NC-SA 3.0)
Connect with RadicalxChange Foundation: