Logo for Moral Repair: A Black Exploration of Tech

Moral Repair: A Black Exploration of Tech

Moral Repair

Two-time AMBIE-nominated podcast Moral Repair: A Black Exploration of Tech is a series about the innovations that make our world, disrupt our societies, and how we can repair the damage.Hosts Annanda Barclay and Keisha McKenzie talk with tech experts, philosophers and spiritual leaders. They explore technological innovation and moral concerns while showcasing empowering, practical wisdom from the African continent and diaspora to nurture wellbeing for all.New episodes drop every other Wednesday—wherever you listen to podcasts. Moral Repair is part of PRX’s Big Questions Project, which supports new podcasts exploring discourse with exemplary thinkers focused on humanity's most profound questions. This second season is supported by the John Templeton Foundation and produced by PRX Productions.

Moral Repair Podcast

Two-time AMBIE-nominated podcast Moral Repair: A Black Exploration of Tech is a series about the innovations that make our world, disrupt our societies, and how we can repair the damage.Hosts Annanda Barclay and Keisha McKenzie talk with tech experts, philosophers and spiritual leaders. They explore technological innovation and moral concerns while showcasing empowering, practical wisdom from the African continent and diaspora to nurture wellbeing for all.New episodes drop every other Wednesday—wherever you listen to podcasts. Moral Repair is part of PRX’s Big Questions Project, which supports new podcasts exploring discourse with exemplary thinkers focused on humanity's most profound questions. This second season is supported by the John Templeton Foundation and produced by PRX Productions.

Moral Repair Podcast
9hr
Thumbnail for "Data Science, Consent, Colonialism—What We Can Learn from the Woods".
Tech companies have access to an immense amount of data about each of us. How are we all being affected in a world where no one can be anonymous?
Thumbnail for "How Tech Impacts American Farmland".
Thumbnail for "Sabbaths and Light Phones: Technologies for Rest".
Taking a Break from Tech with Joe Hollier and Judith Shulevitz: Always-on technology has amplified distraction and overwhelm, disconnection, and cultural polarization. How can social technologies like Shabbat help us heal from tech and tech culture?
Thumbnail for "Political Strategies & AI ".
This episode explores the big question, how is AI used in American political decision-making?
Thumbnail for "Government Regulation: Afrofuturism and Equity in Tech".
What does tech policy look like behind the curtain? And how can Afrofuturist and Black cultural principles make that ecosystem work for those who’ve been left behind?
Thumbnail for "Moral Repair Season 2 Trailer".
Welcome to a new season of the two-time AMBIE-nominated podcast Moral Repair: A Black Exploration of Tech. A series about the innovations that make our world, disrupt our societies, and how we can repair the harm.
Thumbnail for "Your creative superpowers can help protect democracy (from TED Tech)".
From TED Tech, a podcast from the TED Audio Collective: "Democracy is more fun and inviting when you take it into your own hands," says creator and activist Sofia Ongele. Sharing how she's using coding and social media to defend democracy, Ongele invites us to identify our own creative superpowers — whether it's community organizing, making music or telling stories — and use them to cause a ruckus and bring movements to life.
Thumbnail for "Black History, Holograms & How We Remember".
This episode highlights Black memory preservation and story telling
Thumbnail for "An Answer to Big Tech? Tech at a Human Scale".
What if we could make tech at a smaller, more personal scale? Can small tech make the internet good again? The Moral Repair team digs into big questions about colonialism, design, and new ways to fund tech with Aral Balkan from the Small Tech Foundation.
Thumbnail for "Holiday Special: Tech Nostalgia ".
Join us for a holiday celebration episode on Moral Repair! We talk about our nostalgia around tech that brings up all the good feels. Tune in to find out who Annanda and Keisha deem the tech ghosts of holidays past, present and future. We’ve even pointed out this years Scrooge, Bob Crotchet, and Tiny Tim! Enjoy a special holiday nostalgia session, and join our discussion on the true tech meaning of this holiday season.
Thumbnail for "Caribbean Insights Upend Tech Norms".
Join us as we dissect the Californian Ideology Manifesto with our special guest, Professor Jane Gordon. Dive into a thought-provoking conversation that blends Silicon Valley's visions with vibrant Caribbean insights.
Thumbnail for "Web3 & The Pursuit of the American Dream ".
How has the American Dream transformed in the wake of the Great Recession? Annanda & Keisha examine the impact of the Great Recession on the American Dream focusing on the rise of Bitcoin and blockchain.
Thumbnail for "Machine Learning: What’s Good?".
Is it possible to control AI? If so, how can we make it more ethical?
Thumbnail for "Holograms & How We Remember".
Keisha and Annanda have a conversation with Otis Moss III about his father’s hologram at the Maltz Museum
Thumbnail for "Algorithms: Follow the Purple Light".
What do we do about recommendation algorithms? What ethical standards could we use to reshape technology?
Thumbnail for "Introducing... Moral Repair: A Black Exploration of Tech ".
There’s so much new technology to adapt to these days: automation, and AI. It’s overwhelming! But Black technologists, philosophers, care practitioners, and theologians can help us navigate these changing waters. On Moral Repair: A Black Exploration of Tech, hosts Annanda Barclay and Keisha McKenzie talk with tech and spiritual leaders. They explore technological innovation and hazard while showcasing practical wisdom from the African continent and diaspora to nurture wellbeing for all. Moral Repair is for people creating, using, and being shaped by tech, wondering about its implications, and questioning what they can do about it. We expand mainstream tech narratives, celebrate profound insight from Black philosophy and culture, and promote technology when it serves the common good. Together, we’ll leave each episode with new ways to think about tech’s impacts and apply practical wisdom to our everyday lives. Starting October 4th, new episodes drop every 1st and 3rd Wednesday—wherever you listen to podcasts. Moral Repair is part of PRX’s Big Questions Project, which supports new podcasts exploring discourse with exemplary thinkers focused on humanity's most profound questions. This season is supported by the John Templeton Foundation and produced by PRX Productions.
Thumbnail for "Promo | Moral Repair: A Black Exploration of Tech".
There’s so much new technology to adapt to these days: automation, and AI. It’s overwhelming! But Black technologists, philosophers, care practitioners, and theologians can help us navigate these changing waters. On Moral Repair: A Black Exploration of Tech, hosts Annanda Barclay and Keisha McKenzie talk with tech and spiritual leaders. They explore technological innovation and hazard while showcasing practical wisdom from the African continent and diaspora to nurture wellbeing for all. Moral Repair is for people creating, using, and being shaped by tech, wondering about its implications, and questioning what they can do about it. We expand mainstream tech narratives, celebrate profound insight from Black philosophy and culture, and promote technology when it serves the common good. Together, we’ll leave each episode with new ways to think about tech’s impacts and apply practical wisdom to our everyday lives. Starting October 4th, new episodes drop every 1st and 3rd Wednesday—wherever you listen to podcasts.

Data Science, Consent, Colonialism—What We Can Learn from the Woods

Thumbnail for "Data Science, Consent, Colonialism—What We Can Learn from the Woods".
December 13, 202342min 34sec

Tech companies have access to an immense amount of data about each of us. How are we all being affected in a world where no one can be anonymous? Keisha McKenzie and Annanda Barclay talk to data scientist Scott Hendrickson, PhD, about data and consent, ways colonialism shows up in tech development, and more cooperative ethics we can learn from nature.

SHOW NOTES

  • For the next episode: tell us about your nostalgic tech memories! Find us at @moralrepairpodcast on instagram, @moralrepair on Twitter/X, or moralrepairpodcast at gmail dot com

  • How did Cambridge Analytica use 50M people’s Facebook data in 2016? (Knowledge Wharton)

  • California bill makes it easier to delete online personal data (LA Times)

  • “Churches target new members, with help from Big Data” (Wall Street Journal)

  • In the film Enemy of the State, characters uncover all the ways they’re being tracked—it’s a lot.

  • Digital safety for people seeking reproductive care (Digital Defense Fund)

  • How redwood trees communicate (New York Times): “The Social Life of Forests” feat. Professor Suzzane Simard

  • “Thieves Use Tech Devices to Scan Cars Before Breaking Into Them” NBC Bay Area

  • Scott has recommended a few books for our audience:

    God Human Animal Machine: Technology, Metaphor, and the Search for Meaning by Meghan O’Gieblyn

Impromptu: Amplifying our Humanity Through AI by Reid Hoffman

The Battle for Your Brain: Defending the Right to Think Freely in an Age of Neurotechnology by Nita Farahany