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Finding Genius Podcast

Ethical and Transparent Data Collection for the Betterment of Humanity—Scott Nelson—Human Data Commons Foundation

Finding Genius Podcast

Richard Jacobs

Medicine, Health & Fitness

4.41K Ratings

🗓️ 31 December 2018

⏱️ 33 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Established just two and a half years ago, the Human Data Commons Foundation aims to address two primary questions: how do we make the best decisions around the best and most powerful sources of data available to us, and how do we put structures in place that encourage people to share their data in a way that protects their privacy and places them at the center of agency in how that data gets used?


"Companies realize that the more data they have, the better machine learning algorithms they can produce…and that brings with it enormous power…and enormous peril…there's a lot of systemic injustice that can be perpetuated through these…and our intention at the foundation is to bring more attention to that," says Scott Nelson, founder, and chair of the Human Data Commons Foundation.


One way in which they're doing this is by publishing annual "report cards" that review data usage, privacy policies, terms of service, and the amount of agency given to users by the top companies in wearable technology such as Fitbit. The ultimate goal is to democratize, make more transparent, and advance human consciousness and conscious evolution through the responsible and ethical use of data.


Nelson touches on a variety of topics, including the main challenges to the implementation of new structures and processes in established company cultures, the role of blockchain technology in personal data protection, General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), and how a couple of German projects could pave the way for the implementation of open-source, ethical data platforms in the U.S. 

Transcript

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0:00.0

You're listening to the Future Tech Podcast with Richard Jacobs.

0:09.0

Future Technologies such as Artificial Intelligence,

0:11.8

Stem Cells, 3D printing, gene editing,

0:14.6

Bitcoin, blockchain, the microbiome, quantum computing, virtual reality, and exploring space

0:21.0

are much closer than you might think.

0:23.0

In fact, many early versions of these technologies are in play right now,

0:27.0

and the companies that are using these technologies are the focus of this podcast.

0:31.0

My goal for you, the listener, is to learn from these

0:34.4

podcasts. You may very well learn something that may change the course of your life

0:38.2

for the better. Steer you towards a new career or give you insight into

0:42.4

addressing a thorny medical problem.

0:44.4

Remember, this podcast and its content is informational and nature only. No medical,

0:49.2

tax, legal, financial, or psychological advice is being given.

0:53.0

If you've enjoyed the podcast, please listen, subscribe, like, and tell your friends about it.

0:58.0

Thank you. Hello, this is Richard Jacobs with the Future Tech and Future Tech Health

1:08.5

Podcast. I have Scott Nelson. He is the founder and chair of the Human Data Commons Foundation.

1:14.7

Yeah, that's right.

1:17.1

Yeah, and just going back a little bit, yeah,

1:18.9

me sort of about my background.

1:20.7

I'm an early, I guess, relatively early sort of web entrepreneur I started probably the first

1:25.8

web development company in Canada in Vancouver in like 1993 it's very early times

1:35.0

being a computer geek up to that point. And so we really jumped in, you know, in the early days on bringing the web into the

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