4.4 • 1.9K Ratings
🗓️ 25 April 2015
⏱️ 69 minutes
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Marc Goodman is a thinker, writer and global strategist exploring what criminality and terrorism could look like in the close future.
With technology advancing at exponential rates, it becomes an open opportunity platform for those within our international society that would seek to threaten others. All are realistic threats, from global crime networks stealing your identity to hidden terror cells 3D printing AK-47 rifle and drones. Marc is asking the questions out loud, and bringing some answers. How open are these amazing breakthrough technologies, robotics, AI, social data, synthetic biology to manipulation?
It’s a hot topic and Marc’s book, Future Crimes, shot straight up the New York Times bestseller list after it’s release two months ago. But Marc, of course, isn’t just another journalist. He’s writing from experience working for Interpol in France. While training police forces from around the world he realised the rising threat of cybercrime and terror - a trend that would only continue as the internet would embed itself into every aspect of life.
Actively establishing space for the future crime conversation Marc set-up the Future Crimes Institute, a think-tank organisation committed to informing and educating about the risks of new technologies. He’s also continually writing for the academics at Harvard and Oxford, while also getting the message out to the population in the likes of Wired magazine.
Today on London Real, take a journey to the frontline of cyber warfare and crime.
FUTURE CRIMES The Book: http://bit.ly/1z81rS5
Click on a timestamp to play from that location
0:00.0 | This week on London Real, we have the security advisor Mark Goodman, author of future crimes, a journey to the dark side of technology. |
0:11.0 | I'm talking about things that are happening now criminals that are using robotics |
0:14.6 | criminals that are using artificial intelligence criminals that are playing |
0:17.8 | with the internet of things. The bad guys care about your iPhone more than you do. |
0:23.0 | Everything is connected, everyone is vulnerable, and what we can do about it. |
0:27.0 | Everything in our physical world will be hackable. |
0:32.0 | So we see criminals play. in our physical world will be hackable. |
0:33.0 | So we see criminals playing with artificial intelligence, robotics, and the like, |
0:38.0 | and some of these organizations are really sophisticated. |
0:41.0 | Those who pursue security at the risk of liberty will have neither. |
0:47.0 | London Reel presents Mark Goodman, |
0:51.0 | future crimes. |
0:53.5 | The Internet of Things is just going to be the Internet of Things to Hack. |
0:59.0 | This week on London Real, my guest is Mark Goodman, |
1:02.4 | and he's the author of a book called Future Crimes, A Journey to the |
1:06.0 | Dark Side of Technology. Mark is a fascinating guy. He's actually an ex-L-A-P-D officer. |
1:12.4 | Then he was the futurist in residence for the FBI. Now he works for Interpol. He's also got degrees |
1:19.8 | from Harvard. He is a fascinating guy. I would say this is one of the episodes that just flowed from beginning to end. |
1:27.0 | We were just riffing back and forth with each other. You might remember Mark from a very famous TED Talk he gave where he walked through some of the |
1:34.4 | darker sides of technology. One of them was the shootings that happened in Mumbai |
1:38.6 | and how these 20 gentlemen with the use of technology took over a city of 20 million people and just |
1:46.8 | ran havoc over the whole thing because of their use of technology. He also |
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