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Into The Machine with Tobias Rose-Stockwell
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Into The Machine with Tobias Rose-Stockwell

Author: Tobias Rose-Stockwell

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AI is everything, everywhere, all at once. Democracy is very much on the ropes. We are all confused about what comes next.

Upstream of our troubles are a handful of algorithms that are legible to us for now — tools built by social media companies that have fundamentally changed our daily lives. But the newest systems in development will be far more influential, more intimate, more powerful than social media. How might we safely navigate this transition?

We’re on the threshold of a very strange shift of power — from human brains to artificial ones — that will very likely determine the quality of the rest of our lives. This is a show dedicated to uncovering what comes next.

tobias.substack.com
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Today I’m launching Into The Machine.My first episode is a conversation with my colleague, social psychologist and #1 NYT bestselling author Jonathan Haidt.Jon and I wrote a piece in The Atlantic called The Dark Psychology of Social Networks — hoping to add clarity to the debate around social media. AI has changed the conversation. We now find ourselves in a stranger moment with LLMs, asking deeper questions about what these tools are doing to our ability to think.In this episode we discuss: * Attention as civic infrastructure: the erosion of sustained focus undermines shared reality, and with it the preconditions for governance, compromise, and democratic legitimacy.* Engagement algorithms as centrifuges: rather than reflecting consensus, they pull discourse toward the edges, making fringe views appear as if they represent the center.* Democracies as uniquely fragile: unlike authoritarian systems that can integrate these technologies into centralized control, liberal democracies are structurally more vulnerable to their fragmenting effects.* Childhood as the front line: the breakdown of “serve-and-return” interactions, compounded by algorithmic feeds, represents not just a developmental crisis but a possible precursor to broader societal instability.* Human agency atrophied by delegation: when writing, thinking, and decision-making are outsourced to machines, individuals lose the cognitive muscle required for original judgment.A small askThe irony is not lost on us in trying to explain/critique the algorithms while we’re dependent upon them to reach the right audience.If you do enjoy the show, please add a rating to Apple Podcasts and share with a friend — it really helps.And pelase do follow:* Into The Machine on Apple Podcasts* Into The Machine on YouTube* Into The Machine on Spotify* Into The Machine on InstagramOur next guest is Tim Urban, creator of Wait But Why.Thank you, as always, for the gift of your attention. -Tobias Get full access to Outrage Machine at tobias.substack.com/subscribe
We are living in a strange moment.AI is everything, everywhere, all at once. Democracy is very much on the ropes. We are all confused about what comes next.Upstream of our troubles are a handful of algorithms that are legible to us for now. Yet newer systems rapidly being deployed are far more powerful, and far more influential than social media ever was.Over the coming months I’ll be releasing conversations with some of the smartest people I know unpacking these issues, and sharing my essays in video form on my YouTube channel here. Guests like: Jonathan Haidt, Tim Urban, Esther Perel, among others.We’re on the threshold of a very strange transfer of power — from human brains to artificial ones — that will very likely determine the quality of the rest of our lives. This is a show dedicated to uncovering what comes next.I’d love for you to join me.-TobiasSubscribers will get early access and exclusive episodes. Thank you for supporting my work. Get full access to Outrage Machine at tobias.substack.com/subscribe
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