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What Next | Daily News and Analysis

What Next: TBD | Tech, power, and the future - Tomorrow's Children, Edited.

What Next | Daily News and Analysis

Slate Podcasts

News, News Commentary, Daily News

4.32.4K Ratings

🗓️ 28 November 2018

⏱️ 37 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

On today’s show, hosts April Glaser and Will Oremus discuss the ongoing fallout at Facebook over the company’s decision to hire a conservative PR firm to surface opposition research in order to attack Facebook’s nonprofit critics by highlighting their funding ties to the liberal financier George Soros, playing into an untrue and anti-Semitic popular right wing trope. As internal and external turmoil continues to rile major American technology companies, their employee are organizing for serious change. Hosts dig into what that’s accomplished so far and what continued employee pressure and mounting labor actions means down the line.

Then, an interview with Antonio Regalado, a senior editor at the MIT Technology Review, on a story he broke Sunday night: the very first gene-edited babies were born this month in China. The trio discuss the history of gene-editing technology and the debate about using it on humans. To some, gene-editing is a form of medicine, like a vaccination. To others, it’s a form of enhancement. How easy is this to do? And will we have a future where the health of tomorrow’s children, or those whose parents can afford it, will be determined before their children are even born?

14:13 - Interview with Antonio Regalado32:02 - Don’t Close My Tabs

Don’t Close My Tabs:

The New Yorker: Exploding Mojitos: The First “Sonic Attacks” Targeting American Diplomats in Cuba May Have Taken Place Thirty Years Ago

The New York Times: A Business with No End

Podcast production by Max Jacobs

If Then plugs:

You can get updates about what’s coming up next by following us on Twitter @ifthenpod. You can follow Will @WillOremus and April @Aprilaser. If you have a question or comment, you can email us at ifthen@slate.com.

If Then is presented by Slate and Future Tense, a collaboration among Arizona State University, New America, and Slate. Future Tense explores the ways emerging technologies affect society, policy, and culture. To read more, follow us on Twitter and sign up for our weekly newsletter.

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Transcript

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0:00.0

Welcome to If Then, the show about how technology is changing our lives and our future.

0:15.0

I'm April Glazer.

0:16.0

And I'm Will Olimus.

0:22.1

Hey everyone, welcome to If Then.

0:24.0

We're coming to you from Slate and Future Tense,

0:25.9

a partnership between Slate, Arizona State University, and New America.

0:29.7

We're recording this on the afternoon of Tuesday, November 27th.

0:32.9

April is back in town, and we are ready to dig into the tech news of the week.

0:36.7

Yes, I was gone for a couple weeks reporting in Northern California and traveling, but

0:41.8

it's good to be back at the mic. And now we're going to talk about something that happened

0:44.9

the night before Thanksgiving last week. As Americans were flying in to see family and

0:49.2

finalizing their holiday plans, Facebook decided to dump some very serious news. The company admitted that they had

0:55.7

indeed asked a conservative PR firm to attack Facebook's nonprofit critics by highlighting their

1:01.0

funding ties to the liberal financier George Soros. Facebook leaders had previously denied

1:06.5

responsibility for that particular detail, which is understood to be a dog whistle for a common right-wing

1:11.7

trope that a cabal of Jewish elites are controlling global affairs. This, to be clear, is anti-Semitic

1:17.8

and untrue. And this all comes against a backdrop of increasing tension between top tech companies

1:23.6

and their employees. Across Silicon Valley, from Facebook to Amazon to Google to

1:28.3

Microsoft, we're seeing workers at these companies organize and demand more ethical practices

1:33.3

from their employers. We'll also talk about the startling news over the weekend that the first

1:37.9

gene-edited babies were reportedly born in China as part of a secret project at a university.

1:43.5

Using the gene editing technology

...

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