Listen "Internet sabbaths and surveillance capitalism in the COVID-19 era: William Powers on what’s changed since Hamlet’s Blackberry"
Episode Synopsis
ShutterstockCOVID-19 has affected our relationship with technology in many ways, from the pleasures of mass online choirs to the perils of the endless Zoom meetings rendering us “zoombies”.
Connectivity is so hard-wired in our lives, many are re-assessing the virtues of being disconnected.
Ten years ago, US journalist William Powers published Hamlet’s BlackBerry: Building a Good Life in the Digital Age, a book that urged us to take an “internet sabbath” every now and again.
US author William Powers.
https://www.williampowers.com/
It was a prescient idea even if the book’s title sounds rather retro now, but there was a reason for his choice, as he explains today on Media Files.
Powers is a journalist who used to work at The Washington Post and is now an online technology consultant, and he joined me by Zoom from his home in Cape Cod in Massachusetts.
:
'Suck it and see’ or face a digital tax, former ACCC boss Allan Fels warns Google and Facebook
Additional credits
Theme music: Susie Wilkins.
With thanks to Chris Scanlon from Deakin University for production assistance.
Image
Shutterstock
Matthew Ricketson does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.
More episodes of the podcast Media Files
‘Suck it and see’ or face a digital tax, former ACCC boss Allan Fels warns Google and Facebook
26/08/2020
Media Files: investigative journalist Bastian Obermayer, who led the Panama Papers tax exposé
19/09/2019
Media Files: Australians’ trust in news media is falling as concern over ‘fake news’ grows
20/06/2019