Technically Human is a podcast about ethics and technology that
asks what it means to be human in the age of tech. Each week, Professor Deb Donig interviews industry leaders, thinkers, writers, and technologists, and asks them about how they understand the relationship between humans and the technologies we create. We discuss how we can build a better vision for technology, one that represents the best of our human values.
The Diversity Challenge: Race, gender, and how the histories of medicine and technology got made
In this week's “22 Lessons on Ethics and Technology" special series, I sit down with Dr. Evelynn Hammonds to talk about how race and gender have shaped the histories of science, medicine, and technological development.
Memory Drive: The ethics of Holocaust memory in the age of virtual reality
In this episode of ”Technically Human,” I sit down with Dr. Steven Smith, the director USC‘s Dimensions in Holocaust Testimony.
We talk about the ethics of memory, testimony, and witness, and how these fundamental concepts are being radically changed by developing technologies. Steven explains the ethics of Holocaust witness in the digital age and how a new interactive program that enlists virtual technologies may allow Holocaust testimony to remain vivified for generations to come. How should we think about the reality of virtual survivors? How is our basic concept of ”witness” transformed by new technologies? And what does ”memory” mean in our current digital age?