The bad behavior of the richest: what I learned from wealth managers

By: The Guardian October 19, 2018 If nearly a decade interviewing the wealth managers for the 1% taught me anything, it is that the ultra-rich and the ultra-poor have a lot more in common than stereotypes might lead you to believe. In conversation, wealth managers kept coming back to the flamboyant vices of their clients. It […]

Tech’s terrible year: how the world turned on Silicon Valley in 2017

By: The Guardian December 23, 2017 When Jonathan Taplin’s book Move Fast and Break Things, which dealt with the worrying rise of big tech, was first published in the UK in April 2017, his publishers removed its subtitle because they didn’t think it was supported by evidence: “How Facebook, Google and Amazon cornered culture and undermined […]

Social media addiction should be seen as a disease, MPs say

By: The Guardian March 18, 2019 Social media addiction should be considered a disease, MPs have said, in a sign of the pressures facing technology companies and the growing concern over the impact social networks are having on users’ mental health. The politicians called for further research on the effects of social media but said a […]

Posh is so passé – today’s elite prefers the myth of the meritocracy

By: The Guardian December 30, 2018 “I’m not posh,” an irate David Dimbleby told the Today presenter John Humphrys. “I come from Wales, as you do.” Dimbleby, who this month stepped down as host of BBC’s Question Time, was being interviewed by Humphrys, another stalwart of BBC journalism. Humphrys wondered whether Dimbleby’s poshness helped him maintain close ties to […]

Poorer than George Clooney? How you spend your money still sends a message

By: The Guardian April 1, 2019 When Brunei announced the death penalty for gay sex, the actor and Elton John called for a boycott of the sultanate’s luxury hotels. The rest of us should take note  Elton John has joined George Clooney in calling for a boycott of nine Brunei-owned luxury hotels – including the Dorchester, London and […]

Divisions of Labor – The Future of Work

By: Barbara Ehrenreich February 28, 2017 The working class, or at least the white part, has emerged as our great national mystery. Traditionally Democratic, they helped elect a flamboyantly ostentatious billionaire to the presidency. “What’s wrong with them?” the liberal pundits keep asking. Why do they believe Trump’s promises? Are they stupid or just deplorably […]

Mona Lisa frown: Machine learning brings old paintings and photos to life

By: Tech Crunch May, 2019 Machine learning researchers have produced a system that can recreate lifelike motion from just a single frame of a person’s face, opening up the possibility of animating not just photos but also paintings. It’s not perfect, but when it works, it is — like much AI work these days — […]