PODCAST · technology
Ruined By The Internet? – How Social Media, AI and Technology are changing modern life
by Gareth King - uncovering the human cost of the digital world
Is the internet really ruining everything, or are we just looking at it wrong?Ruined By The Internet? explores how social media, AI, and technology are shaping society, culture, and modern life; including how we think, behave, and connect - whether we want it to or not.From internet culture to the psychological and human impact of tech, we look at the digital world not as a set of products, but as the environment we all live in.Through conversations with leading experts from around the world, we seek to uncover the true casualties behind today’s biggest questions: How is social media changing us? Is AI reshaping human behaviour? And what are the real consequences of our very online lives?Let us know what to look into at https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/, or support the show at https://buymeacoffee.com/rbtishow
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Empowerment: Objectification Rebranded as Agency? | Digital Monetisation & the Attention Economy
When it comes to empowering ourselves, we were told the internet would give us back control. But instead, has it simply delivered a more efficient way for us to become products, and successfully rebranded objectification as agency?We’re joined by Courtney Kocak - writer, comedian, and author of the memoir Girl Gone Wild - to investigate one of the most uncomfortable questions about what technology has done to identity, autonomy, power, and the people caught in between.Welcome to Ruined By The Internet? - the show where we examine how technology is shaping modern life - whether we want it to or not.Follow or subscribe to never miss the next investigation - new episodes regularly.Visit us: https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/Help us investigate ourselves: https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/survey/Support the show: https://buymeacoffee.com/rbtishowIn this episode we trace the journey from early 2000s media to today's self-monetisation platforms, examine how the attention economy and algorithms have reshaped desire and self-perception, investigate the rise of online male communities and their generational impact, and ask whether AI is accelerating the problem - or simply making it harder to see.00:00 - The Internet's impact on empowerment and objectification03:10 - From early 2000s media to today's self-monetization platforms07:50 - The evolution of pop culture and its increasingly explicit direction09:12 - Tracing the cultural roots of today's online extremity13:28 - The influence of the attention economy14:37 - The rise of the manosphere and its impact16:29 - The generational difference: navigating online life and authenticity20:13 - Shifting attitudes toward sex work and societal acceptance23:29 - The influence of explicit online content25:34 - How online validation shapes our self-perception27:13 - Authenticity and the rejection of algorithm-driven content30:18 - The potential and pitfalls of AI in digital content and society34:47 - The impact of AI-generated actors and content on creative industries36:57 - The slow political response to AI and digital regulation38:15 - The importance of nuanced conversations39:41 - Concerns about technology's societal effectsGuest links — Courtney KocakWebsite: https://www.courtneykocak.com/Podcast: https://www.privatepartsunknown.com/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/courtneykocak/TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@courtneykocak
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Rental Markets: A Frantic Fight for Shelter as a Service? | Airbnb, PropTech & the Housing Crisis
The internet was supposed to make the rental market more efficient and transparent. But has it instead turned the basic human need for shelter into a frantic, dehumanising battle with technology - where algorithms, platforms, and data have more power than the people looking for a home?We're joined by Thomas Sigler - Deputy Head of the School of the Environment and Associate Professor of Human Geography at the University of Queensland - whose research sits at the exact intersection of urban geography, technology, and how we live.Welcome to Ruined By The Internet? - the show where we examine how technology is shaping modern life - whether we want it to or not.Follow or subscribe to never miss the next investigation - new episodes regularly.Visit us: https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/Help us investigate ourselves: https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/survey/Support the show: https://buymeacoffee.com/rbtishowIn this episode we investigate how short-term rental platforms hollowed out housing supply, examine the role of PropTech in reshaping how we search and apply for homes, explore the data privacy implications of digital rental applications, and ask whether the technology that promised transparency has simply handed more power to landlords, platforms, and property influencers.00:00 Introduction to the Rental Market Crisis02:57 The Impact of Short-Term Rentals06:04 Understanding the Rental Market Dynamics08:47 The Role of PropTech in Rental Searches11:55 Community Resistance and Transient Populations15:02 The Rise of Digital Nomadism17:51 The Transparency of Digital Platforms21:07 Privacy Concerns in Rental Applications24:09 Regulatory Challenges in the Rental Market26:45 The Influence of Property Influencers29:56 FOMO and the Property Market33:10 Crisis in the Housing Market36:05 The Future of Housing and Technology38:59 What renters can actually doGuest links — Thomas Sigler:https://environment.uq.edu.au/profile/9602/thomas-sigler
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Self Improvement: Progress Replaced with Performance? | Social Media, Algorithms & Personal Growth
The internet promised to make self-improvement accessible to everyone. But has it instead turned it into a spectator sport - replacing process with performance, and pushing us to consume playbooks rather than actually build habits?We're joined by Justin Leff - behavioural coach and founder of Solilium Coaching - who helps people with discipline, wellness, and self-understanding, and has seen firsthand what happens when the algorithm becomes the self-improvement plan.Welcome to Ruined By The Internet? - the show where we examine how technology is shaping modern life - whether we want it to or not.Follow or subscribe to never miss the next investigation - new episodes regularly.Visit us: https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/Help us investigate ourselves: https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/survey/Support the show: https://buymeacoffee.com/rbtishowIn this episode we investigate how algorithms and social media have reshaped our goals and motivation, examine the danger of social comparison in a world of curated success, explore how digital overload creates decision fatigue, and ask whether AI is finally the personalised self-improvement tool we were promised - or just a more sophisticated version of the same one-size-fits-all problem.00:00 The Impact of the Internet on Self-Improvement03:12 Globalisation of Ideas and Goals06:07 The Dangers of Social Comparison09:08 The Role of Role Models in the Digital Age12:03 Chasing Status vs. Genuine Self-Improvement15:12 The Journey of Self-Discovery18:05 The Process Over Quick Fixes21:14 The Impact of Digital Overload on Motivation24:08 Navigating Decision Fatigue in a World of Options28:03 The Future of Self-Improvement Without Social Media30:41 AI's Role in Tailored Self-Improvement35:08 Finding Authentic Peer Support in Self-Improvement37:13 The Importance of Community in Personal GrowthGuest links - Justin LeffWebsite: https://www.soliliumcoaching.com/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/soliliumthoughts/YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@SoliliumThoughts
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The Taxi Industry: A Data-Driven Destruction of Dignified Work? | Uber, The Gig Economy & Worker Rights
The internet promised to revolutionise how we get around - delivering a modern, efficient, and affordable alternative to the old ways. But did the revolution simply replace one system with an unstable, exploitative gig economy, offering the illusion of flexibility with almost zero protections?We're joined by Rod Barton - former Victorian Member of Parliament and founder of the Transport Matters Party - who fought the regulatory battle for taxi drivers firsthand, and understands better than most what happens when platforms disrupt an industry and governments struggle to keep up.Welcome to Ruined By The Internet? - the show where we examine how technology is shaping modern life - whether we want it to or not.Follow or subscribe to never miss the next investigation - new episodes regularly.Visit us: https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/Help us investigate ourselves: https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/survey/Support the show: https://buymeacoffee.com/rbtishowIn this episode we investigate how rideshare platforms dismantled the traditional taxi industry, examine the safety and insurance gaps that opened up in the process, explore the rights of gig economy workers caught between flexibility and exploitation, and ask whether government regulation has any hope of keeping pace with the platforms rewriting the rules.00:00 - The internet's impact on the taxi industry03:01 - What the taxi industry looked like before rideshare05:52 - The regulatory framework rideshare bypassed08:57 - Safety and insurance gaps in rideshare services12:13 - Gig economy workers — flexibility or exploitation?15:05 - Customer service in the age of algorithmic dispatch17:50 - Where the gig economy is heading21:00 - The role of government in regulating platform transport23:55 - What a fair path forward looks like for drivers and ridersGuest links — Rod BartonWebsite: https://rodbarton.com.auLinkedIn: https://linkedin.com/in/rod-bartonFacebook: https://facebook.com/RodBarton08
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Decentralisation: Freedom or Fragmented Control? | Blockchain, Crypto, Web3 & Digital Freedom
The internet promised to be an escape from centralised power - a user-controlled, peer-to-peer network that would democratise access and dismantle the gatekeepers. But thanks to the domination of Big Tech and Venture Capital, has that dream been systematically stolen and replaced by a new set of gatekeepers wearing different clothes?We're joined by Joseph Kennedy - Head of Marketing & Growth at blockchain platform Alephium - who works at the centre of decentralisation and understands better than most the gap between what the technology promised and what it delivered.Welcome to Ruined By The Internet? - the show where we examine how technology is shaping modern life - whether we want it to or not.Follow or subscribe to never miss the next investigation - new episodes regularly.Visit us: https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/Help us investigate ourselves: https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/survey/Support the show: https://buymeacoffee.com/rbtishowIn this episode we investigate how venture capital and Big Tech quietly captured the decentralisation movement, examine the rise and fall of crypto's public credibility, explore the regulatory battle between governments and decentralised networks, and ask whether true decentralisation is still possible - or whether the centre always wins in the end.00:00 - The promise of decentralisation and how it was eroded02:50 - The role of venture capital in shaping crypto06:11 - The infrastructure dilemma: centralised tools in a decentralised world08:57 - Public perception of crypto and Web3: how did it go so wrong?12:11 - The influence of regulation on decentralised innovation15:08 - Corporate involvement in Web3: help or hijack?17:52 - NFTs beyond the hype: is there real utility?20:50 - How value is perceived in the digital asset space23:07 - The rise and fall of Steemit as a cautionary tale28:08 - The ethical dilemma at the heart of centralisation vs decentralisation30:29 - Can the decentralised space self-regulate?33:18 - Government control and the decentralised response37:50 - The real barriers to mass adoption40:12 - A divided landscape — where decentralisation goes from here42:55 - A vision for what true decentralisation could look likeGuest links – Joseph KennedyWebsite: http://www.alephium.orgTwitter: http://www.twitter.com/bigpepghostLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/josephkennedyuk/
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Deeper Connection: An Algorithmic Illusion of Intimacy? | Relationships, Social Media & the Psychology of Connection
The internet brought connectivity unlike anything we'd ever experienced. But by making so much of our communication instant and effortless, has it actually eroded everything we need to truly connect with each other?We're joined by Dr Maria-Elena Lukeides - clinical psychologist specialising in Mindfulness-based Cognitive Behavioural Therapies, drawing on neuroscience, behavioural design, and evolutionary psychology - who understands better than most what genuine human connection actually requires, and what the digital world is quietly stripping away.Welcome to Ruined By The Internet? - the show where we examine how technology is shaping modern life - whether we want it to or not.Follow or subscribe to never miss the next investigation - new episodes regularly.Visit us: https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/Help us investigate ourselves: https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/survey/Support the show: https://buymeacoffee.com/rbtishowIn this episode we investigate how digital communication has changed the nature of relationships, examine the neuroscience behind why online validation feels like connection but isn't, explore the battle between dopamine and oxytocin in a world optimised for instant gratification, and ask whether AI is the most dangerous substitute for human connection yet - or simply the most convenient.00:00 - The internet's impact on human connection02:34 - The illusion of connection in a hyper-connected world06:03 - What online communication can and can't replicate10:37 - How the internet is eroding our patience for real relationships13:30 - Why we avoid unpleasant emotions - and what that costs us17:14 - Dopamine vs oxytocin: the chemistry of real vs digital connection20:53 - The quest for meaningful relationships in a fast-paced world24:17 - How digital habits are bleeding into real-life connections28:23 - AI as a substitute for human connection: comfort or catastrophe?33:43 - The challenges facing modern relationships38:07 - Building resilience in relationships in a distracted world41:00 - Psychedelic therapy and its role in rebuilding connectionGuest links - Dr Maria-Elena LukeidesWebsite: https://www.drmariaelenalukeides.com.auInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/drmariaelena_lukeides/LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/in/maria-elena-lukeides-270379a5
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Ayahuasca: From Ancient Ritual to Instagram Aesthetic? | Psychedelics, Cultural Appropriation & Spiritual Tourism
The internet has made ayahuasca more accessible than ever - bringing the promise of spiritual awakening and deep healing to people worldwide. But in doing so, has it commodified a sacred practice, fuelling a rise in unqualified facilitators and a dangerous disregard for the cultural traditions it came from?We're joined by Bia Labate - Brazilian anthropologist, founder and Executive Director of The Chacruna Institute of Psychedelic Plant Medicines, and one of the world's leading ayahuasca experts - who has spent her career at the intersection of indigenous knowledge, psychedelic research, and the ethics of what happens when ancient practices meet the modern internet.Welcome to Ruined By The Internet? - the show where we examine how technology is shaping modern life - whether we want it to or not.Follow or subscribe to never miss the next investigation - new episodes regularly.Visit us: https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/Help us investigate ourselves: https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/survey/Support the show: https://buymeacoffee.com/rbtishowIn this episode we investigate how social media transformed ayahuasca from a protected indigenous practice into a globally marketed experience, examine the ethical minefield of selling spiritual healing online, explore the very real risks of unqualified facilitators operating in an unregulated digital marketplace, and ask whether the internet's role in spreading ayahuasca has done more harm than good — or opened doors that needed opening.00:00 - Introduction to ayahuasca and the internet's impact01:03 - Bia's personal journey with ayahuasca04:09 - How ayahuasca practices have evolved in the digital age07:37 - Social media's role in shaping ayahuasca experiences12:28 - Authenticity versus misrepresentation in online ayahuasca culture17:16 - Guidelines for finding safe ayahuasca practices online19:58 - The role of facilitators in healing ceremonies21:02 - Navigating the real risks of digitally sourced ceremonies22:45 - Cultural etiquette and the question of community control24:35 - The genuine positive outcomes of ayahuasca's global exposure27:46 - The paradox of ayahuasca's popularity29:26 - Ethics and sustainability in a commodified practice31:03 - How digitalisation is changing the ceremony itself34:16 - What prospective participants should know before they look onlineGuest links – Bia LabateWebsite: http://www.bialabate.netChacruna Institute: https://chacruna.net/YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC22F9iOhoGVWPiVlO9ueN0Q/featuredInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/labatebia/Further reading: https://chacruna.net/the-commodification-of-ayahuasca-how-can-we-do-better/
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Common Ground: From Dialogue to Digital Battlefield? | Polarisation, Echo Chambers, Algorithms & Social Media
The internet promised a place where people from diverse backgrounds could find connection and understanding. But has it instead become a deeply polarised medium where echo chambers and ideological extremism make meaningful common ground harder to find than ever?We're joined by Dr Andres Reiljan - political scientist at the European University Institute - whose research into affective polarisation puts him at the exact intersection of politics, psychology, and what the digital world is doing to how we see each other.Welcome to Ruined By The Internet? - the show where we examine how technology is shaping modern life - whether we want it to or not.Follow or subscribe to never miss the next investigation - new episodes regularly.Visit us: https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/Help us investigate ourselves: https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/survey/Support the show: https://buymeacoffee.com/rbtishowIn this episode we investigate the mechanics of affective polarisation in a digital age, examine how algorithms amplify divisive sentiment without most people realising it, explore the psychological toll of constant exposure to conflict, and ask whether technology that created the polarisation problem can ever meaningfully solve it.00:00 - Introduction to affective polarisation02:30 - What affective polarisation actually means and why it matters04:30 - The role of politics in driving digital division07:05 - Party versus leader polarisation: what's the difference?09:17 - The biggest misconceptions about polarisation11:35 - How algorithms amplify divisive content13:44 - Factual belief polarisation: when we can't agree on reality16:13 - Navigating disagreement with curiosity rather than conflict18:02 - The outsized influence of loud voices in political discourse19:56 - The mechanics of how polarisation spreads and sticks24:36 - Social media's specific role in the polarisation crisis29:11 - Finding common ground in a fragmented world32:24 - The psychological toll of living in a polarised environment34:06 - Practical strategies for overcoming polarisation36:09 - Can technology be used to combat what technology created?Guest links - Dr Andres ReiljanGoogle Scholar: https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=uBEitnwAAAAJ&hl=en&oi=aoTwitter/X: https://x.com/AReiljanFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/andres.reiljanBluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/areiljan.bsky.social
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Brand Trust: The Era of Algorithmic Enshittification? | Marketing, Surveillance Capitalism & Digital Advertising
The internet was supposed to empower brands to build relationships based on authenticity and shared values. But has it instead become a surveillance capitalism machine - exploiting and manipulating our attention until we stopped trusting brands, marketing, and the platforms behind them entirely?We're joined by Nick Richtsmeier - growth consultant and founder of CultureCraft - who works directly with businesses and non-profits to solve the trust decay problem, and understands better than most what brands did wrong and whether there's any way back.Welcome to Ruined By The Internet? - the show where we examine how technology is shaping modern life - whether we want it to or not.Follow or subscribe to never miss the next investigation - new episodes regularly.Visit us: https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/Help us investigate ourselves: https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/survey/Support the show: https://buymeacoffee.com/rbtishowIn this episode we investigate the mechanics of brand trust decay in the digital age, examine the concept of enshittification and how platforms turned authenticity into a performance, explore the shift toward community-based growth as a response to algorithmic manipulation, and ask whether genuine trust between brands and people is still possible - or whether the damage is already done.00:00 - The internet's impact on brand trust05:03 – Enshittification: what it means and why it matters10:05 - How algorithms shape and distort brand perception15:03 - The shift toward community and authenticity as a response19:58 - Navigating the future of business relationships in a cynical market24:43 - The ticking clock of social movements and brand relevance29:00 - The role brands should play in societal change35:09 - What building genuine trust in the digital age actually looks like39:55 - The illusion of internet trust - and who it serves46:58 - The human spirit versus digital realityGuest links - Nick RichtsmeierWebsite: https://www.damnsgiven.com/CultureCraft: https://culturecraft.com/Podcast: https://www.buzzsprout.com/2365925LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/nickrichtsmeier/
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Reputation Management: A New World of Digital Life Sentences? | Crisis Communications, Online Reputation & Digital PR
By creating an environment of radically decentralised authority, has the internet shattered the slow, controlled process of reputation management - turning it into a fast, volatile, and potentially permanent crisis cycle where your worst moment follows you forever?We're joined by Stuart Thomson - public affairs and political engagement specialist, author, and founder of reputation management consultancy CWE Communications - who has navigated reputation crises in the digital age firsthand, and understands better than most what it costs when the internet never forgets.Welcome to Ruined By The Internet? - the show where we examine how technology is shaping modern life - whether we want it to or not.Follow or subscribe to never miss the next investigation - new episodes regularly.Visit us: https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/Help us investigate ourselves: https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/survey/Support the show: https://buymeacoffee.com/rbtishowIn this episode we investigate how the internet transformed reputation crises from slow and controllable to fast and permanent, examine the ethics of public relations in an age of misinformation and AI, explore the murky dynamics of reputation laundering and influencer manipulation, and ask whether any crisis communications strategy can keep pace with a digital world that never forgets and never forgives.00:00 - Introduction to reputation management in the digital age02:00 - How the internet changed the speed and nature of reputation crises06:08 - Crisis preparedness: what organisations get wrong before it happens09:50 - The power dynamics at play in digital reputation management13:59 - Handling unexpected crises when public perception moves faster than truth18:08 - The ethical minefield of public relations in a digital age22:03 - AI and misinformation: the new frontier of reputation threat25:49 - Reputation laundering and the role of influencers in perception management30:00 - How to identify and respond to smear campaigns in the digital space33:02 - What effective reputation management actually looks like todayGuest links - Stuart ThomsonWebsite: https://www.cwecommunications.comPodcast: https://publicaffairs.podbean.com/YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@CWECommunicationsAmazon: https://www.amazon.co.uk/shop/redpolitics/
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Trust in Information: The End of Believing Our Own Eyes? | Misinformation, Media Trust, AI & Digital Literacy
The internet promised a more informed society where anyone could share knowledge freely. But has it instead created a crisis of trust - where expertise is constantly challenged, and huge numbers of us struggle to discern fact from fiction?We're joined by Terry Flew - Professor of Digital Communication & Culture and Co-Director of the Centre for AI, Trust & Governance at the University of Sydney - whose research sits at the exact intersection of media, technology, and why we've stopped believing what we read.Welcome to Ruined By The Internet? - the show where we examine how technology is shaping modern life - whether we want it to or not.Follow or subscribe to never miss the next investigation - new episodes regularly.Visit us: https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/Help us investigate ourselves: https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/survey/Support the show: https://buymeacoffee.com/rbtishowIn this episode we investigate the concept of mediated trust and how the internet broke it, examine the battle between social media and traditional journalism for credibility, explore how AI is accelerating the misinformation crisis, and ask whether critical thinking is enough to navigate a digital world specifically designed to exploit our trust.00:00 - Introduction to mediated trust and the information crisis01:26 - How media and misinformation have evolved together01:37 - What mediated trust actually means and why it's breaking down06:06 - The crisis of trust in institutions: is it terminal?07:39 - How algorithms decide what we trust without us realising09:28 - Trust in Australian media: a case study in collapse14:10 - Journalists versus influencers: who's actually shaping what we believe?17:57 - Defamation, power dynamics, and who gets to control the narrative19:27 - How media trust and consumption patterns are shifting in real time22:29 - The polarising impact of celebrity culture on information credibility24:25 - AI's role in information processing: help or accelerant?30:16 - Navigating human versus machine communication in a trust vacuum33:09 - What restoring trust in information sources would actually requireGuest links – Terry FlewUniversity profile: https://www.sydney.edu.au/arts/about/our-people/academic-staff/terry-flew.htmlPodcast: https://mediated-trust-arts.sydney.edu.au/programs/time-for-trust-podcast-series/LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/terryflew/
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The Internet: A Corporate Hijacking of Digital Freedom? | Big Tech, Digital Censorship & Online Freedom
The internet was supposed to be where the free exchange of knowledge and ideas happened. But has it instead become a place increasingly controlled by a handful of companies - where inconvenient ideas are suppressed, and the original promise of an open web has been quietly hijacked?We're joined by Wouter Constant - co-founder and researcher at Nostr, an open protocol for decentralised, censorship-resistant communication - who is actively building the alternative and understands better than most how the internet lost its way.Welcome to Ruined By The Internet? - the show where we examine how technology is shaping modern life - whether we want it to or not.Follow or subscribe to never miss the next investigation - new episodes regularly.Visit us: https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/Help us investigate ourselves: https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/survey/Support the show: https://buymeacoffee.com/rbtishowIn this episode we investigate how the internet shifted from open network to corporate controlled platform, examine the role of government in shaping what we can and can't say online, explore the promise and challenges of decentralised alternatives like Nostr, and ask whether a genuinely free internet is still possible - or whether centralisation always wins in the end.00:00 - The promise of the internet and how it was abandoned02:54 - The rise of centralised platforms and how it happened so fast05:54 - Investment, network effects, and how corporations captured the web09:00 - Government involvement and the censorship dynamic nobody talks about12:02 - Decentralisation and freedom of association: what the alternative looks like15:07 - The real challenges of building a decentralised internet18:08 - Platform responsibility and what user experience costs us27:09 - Who is actually responsible for what happens in digital spaces?29:44 - The evolution of decentralised social media32:30 - Nostr versus Bluesky: what's the difference and does it matter?35:30 - Identity and reputation in a decentralised world39:16 - How decentralisation handles content authenticity44:25 - Navigating AI-generated content in an open protocol50:51 - Building a safer internet for future generations: is it still possible?Guest links - Wouter ConstantNostr: https://nostr.com/Web of Trust Foundation: https://weboftrustfoundation.com/
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Truly Disappearing: Powering Our Own Perpetual Surveillance? | Digital Footprints, Online Privacy & Data Retention
The internet has given us unprecedented connection. But thanks to relentless data retention and the constant tracking of our every digital move, is it now virtually impossible to shed our old identity and start a new life undetected?We're joined by Lachlan Jarvis — private investigator, digital forensics expert, and Director of Lyonswood Investigations — who spends his career finding people who don't want to be found, and understands better than most just how permanent our digital trails really are.Welcome to Ruined By The Internet? - the show where we examine how technology is shaping modern life - whether we want it to or not.Follow or subscribe to never miss the next investigation - new episodes regularly.Visit us: https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/Help us investigate ourselves: https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/survey/Support the show: https://buymeacoffee.com/rbtishowIn this episode we investigate how the digital landscape has made true anonymity virtually impossible, examine the difference between active and passive digital footprints and what each reveals, explore the right to be forgotten and why it rarely works in practice, and ask whether reinventing yourself in a world that never forgets is still genuinely possible.00:00 - Introduction to private investigation in the digital age01:48 - How digital growth transformed the art of investigation04:13 - Understanding digital footprints: what you leave without knowing it08:04 - The interplay between online and offline data trails11:32 - The right to be forgotten: what it promises and what it actually delivers17:50 - The future of investigation in the age of AI20:32 - The challenge of truly disappearing in a connected world22:16 - The art of disappearing: is it still possible?23:00 - Digital privacy and security measures that actually work24:29 - Understanding malware and the digital threats most people ignore25:28 - Identity theft and its real world consequences27:08 - Creating a new identity in a world that never forgets28:46 - The role of technology in helping - and hindering - disappearance30:13 - Government surveillance and digital IDs: how much do they know?31:53 - The risks of centralised information and who controls it33:25 - Practical steps for digital hygiene you can take todayGuest links - Lachlan JarvisWebsite: https://www.investigators.net.au/Twitter/X: https://x.com/Lyonswood_PIInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/lyonswoodinvestigations/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/LyonswoodInvestigationsYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@lyonswoodinvestigations
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Social Interaction: The Digital Erasure of Presence? | Digital Distraction, Phone Addiction & Mental Health
With its constant presence and insatiable demand for attention, has the internet invaded our offline spaces - diminishing our ability to be truly present and eroding the quality of our in-person experiences?We're joined by Emily Toner - clinical psychologist and international expert in mindfulness, eco-psychology, and mental health - who understands better than most what we lose when we're physically present but digitally elsewhere.Welcome to Ruined By The Internet? - the show where we examine how technology is shaping modern life - whether we want it to or not.Follow or subscribe to never miss the next investigation - new episodes regularly.Visit us: https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/Help us investigate ourselves: https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/survey/Support the show: https://buymeacoffee.com/rbtishowIn this episode we investigate how constant digital distraction is eroding the quality of our in-person relationships, examine the concept of phubbing and what it's actually doing to the people around us, explore the tension between the state of doing and the state of being in a world that never switches off, and ask whether genuine presence is still possible in a digitally saturated life.00:00 - The internet's impact on social interaction and presence05:06 - Why social connection matters more than we admit, and what technology is costing us09:55 - How our definition of social interaction has shifted in the digital age14:51 - The distraction of technology in social settings: what we're missing20:03 – Phubbing: the new social norm nobody wants to talk about24:48 - The state of doingness versus beingness, and why the internet keeps us stuck28:09 - The importance of community connections in a digitally fragmented world35:37 - How digital interactions are changing the nature of real relationships39:22 - AI and the future of human connection: comfort or catastrophe?46:25 - Practical strategies for healthier social interactions in a tech-driven worldGuest links - Emily TonerWebsite: https://www.emilytoner.comPodcast: https://pod.link/1828836798Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/emilytoner_Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/emilytonerconsulting/LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/emily-toner-27413336/
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Music: An Algorithmic Burial of Human Artists? | Spotify, TikTok & The Music Industry
The internet promised to empower artists and give listeners infinite choice. But has it instead turned music into a disposable commodity - replacing human curation with algorithms, and making it virtually impossible for most artists to earn a sustainable living?We're joined by Charlie Hooper-Williams - critically acclaimed composer, pianist, creative coder, and one of the developers behind music identification app Shazam - whose new album The Book of Fixed Stars is out now on The Way Beyond Music. He's seen the music industry's digital transformation from both sides, and understands better than most what's been lost and what's still possible.Welcome to Ruined By The Internet? - the show where we examine how technology is shaping modern life - whether we want it to or not.Follow or subscribe to never miss the next investigation - new episodes regularly.Visit us: https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/Help us investigate ourselves: https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/survey/Support the show: https://buymeacoffee.com/rbtishowIn this episode we investigate how streaming platforms devalued music while promising to democratise it, examine the TikTokification of music and what it's doing to artistic ambition, explore the role of algorithms in deciding what gets heard and what disappears, and ask whether AI is the final chapter in the story of music's commodification - or the beginning of something genuinely new.00:00 - Introduction to Charlie's musical journey and digital transformation01:31 - How digital technology changed everything about the music industry02:33 - The TikTokification of music: what it means for artists and listeners04:17 - The devaluation of music as an art form in a streaming world05:32 - Streaming platforms: exposure versus earnings, and who really wins08:06 - Spotify's role in reshaping the music industry08:51 - The challenges of discoverability when algorithms control what gets heard12:17 - How the artist-fan relationship has evolved, and what's been lost17:52 - Technology's role in music creation and distribution today20:04 - Navigating the modern music landscape as an independent artist22:56 - Live performance in the age of technology: what still can't be replicated25:46 - The role of algorithms and AI in music: creative tool or existential threat?34:50 - The future of music in a digital age40:46 - Advice for aspiring musicians trying to survive the internet economyGuest links - Charlie Hooper-WilliamsWebsite: http://charliehooperwilliams.comInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/charliehooperwilliamsYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@CharlieHooperWilliams
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Gambling: Optimised for Frictionless Financial Mayhem? | Online Gambling Addiction, Betting Apps & Regulation
The internet promised to modernise an age-old activity, bringing new convenience to a quick thrill. But has it instead delivered a predatory, 24/7 addiction machine - one that exploits our psychology with algorithms and has created what many now consider a serious public health crisis?We're joined by Mark Kempster - gambling reform advocate and member of Australia's Alliance For Gambling Reform's Voices of Lived Experience program - who has seen the human cost of online gambling firsthand, and is fighting to make sure others don't pay the same price.Welcome to Ruined By The Internet? - the show where we examine how technology is shaping modern life - whether we want it to or not.Follow or subscribe to never miss the next investigation - new episodes regularly.Visit us: https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/Help us investigate ourselves: https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/survey/Support the show: https://buymeacoffee.com/rbtishowIn this episode we investigate the addictive design built into digital platforms, examine how data and algorithms are used to target vulnerable people at their most exposed moments, explore the normalisation of online activity among young people, and ask whether regulation can ever keep pace with an industry that has turned a public health crisis into a business model.00:00 - The rise of online gambling and its real world impact06:55 - The addictive design deliberately built into digital platforms11:48 - Regulatory challenges and the industry's influence over reform15:59 - How data and algorithms are used to target vulnerable people23:38 - The future of reform in Australia: what needs to change25:33 - The pervasiveness of the problem among young people27:57 - The specific dangers of in-play betting and real time exploitation30:46 - How online culture has normalised what was once considered a serious risk34:49 - The role of technology in accelerating addiction39:03 - The urgent need for regulation and corporate accountability43:33 - Advocacy for change and what hope for the future looks likeGuest links - Mark KempsterInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/mark_kempsterLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mark-kempster-2925317b/Twitter/X: https://x.com/OffOddsAlliance For Gambling Reform: https://www.agr.org.au/
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The Human Identity: Authenticity or Algorithmic Performance? | Social Media, Digital Identity & Online Personas
The internet promised a world of self-expression and genuine connection. But has it instead encouraged us to build performative versions of ourselves - curated by algorithms and validated by likes - until we've lost track of who we actually are?We're joined by Colin Corby - Digital Detox Coach, Technologist, and CEO of Technology Wellbeing - who helps people reclaim their identity from the platforms designed to reshape it, and understands better than most the psychological cost of living online.Welcome to Ruined By The Internet? - the show where we examine how technology is shaping modern life - whether we want it to or not.Follow or subscribe to never miss the next investigation - new episodes regularly.Visit us: https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/Help us investigate ourselves: https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/survey/Support the show: https://buymeacoffee.com/rbtishowIn this episode we investigate how social media has separated our online and offline selves, examine the psychological toll of performing an identity for algorithmic approval, explore the role of influencers in reshaping how we measure our own self-worth, and ask whether AI is accelerating the identity crisis - or offering a way out of it.00:00 - The internet's impact on human identity02:49 - Curating online versus offline selves, and the gap between them05:46 - The psychological effects of social media on who we think we are08:51 - The role of influencers in shaping identity and self-worth11:57 - The stress of maintaining an online performance indefinitely14:44 - AI and the future of human identity: help or accelerant?17:46 - The case for digital detox and what it actually achieves21:00 - The psychological toll of a permanent online record24:05 - Empathy in the digital age: is it surviving?27:00 - AI's role in the workplace and what it means for professional identity30:07 - The future of human identity in a technology-driven world36:19 - Cyborgs and the evolution of human identityGuest links - Colin CorbyWebsite: https://thedigitaldetoxcoach.comInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/the_digital_detox_coachYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@thedigitaldetoxcoachLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/colincorby
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Human Resources: The Era of Digital Reductionism? | AI Hiring, Workplace Surveillance & HR Technology
The internet promised to make human resources more efficient, objective, and data-driven. But has it instead turned a human-centric discipline into an automated, impersonal system - introducing new ethical concerns, workplace surveillance, and privacy risks that nobody signed up for?We're joined by Dr Justine Ferrer - Senior Lecturer in Human Resource Management at the Deakin Business School - whose research sits at the intersection of people, technology, and the ethics of how organisations treat the humans inside them.Welcome to Ruined By The Internet? - the show where we examine how technology is shaping modern life - whether we want it to or not.Follow or subscribe to never miss the next investigation - new episodes regularly.Visit us: https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/Help us investigate ourselves: https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/survey/Support the show: https://buymeacoffee.com/rbtishowIn this episode we investigate how automation and AI have reshaped HR practices, examine the tension between efficiency and the human touch in people management, explore the surveillance and data privacy risks that digital HR systems have introduced, and ask whether AI can ever be genuinely unbiased in hiring - or whether it simply encodes existing inequalities at scale.00:00 - The internet's impact on human resources and people management02:57 - The shift toward strategic HR, and what got left behind06:00 - Balancing automation and the human touch in a digital workplace08:47 - Workplace surveillance and the erosion of employee trust11:53 - Data privacy and security challenges in modern HR systems14:48 - How small businesses are navigating HR technology without the resources17:57 - AI, algorithmic bias, and the future of hiring20:55 - The skills HR professionals need to survive the automation wave23:43 - Building an ethical framework for AI in human resources26:50 - The future of human resources in a technology-driven worldGuest links - Dr Justine FerrerLinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/in/justineferrer
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Video Games: From Finished Art to Perpetual Product? | Gaming Industry, Microtransactions, Esports & Game Development
Through predatory monetisation, rushed development, and profits placed firmly over player enjoyment, has the internet turned one of the world's great creative mediums into a subscription-driven, microtransaction-riddled shadow of what it once promised to be?We're joined by Steve Wright - owner and Editor-in-Chief of Stevivor.com, Australia's leading independent video games outlet - who has covered the gaming industry's digital transformation from the inside, and understands better than most what's been gained, what's been lost, and what the industry refuses to admit.Welcome to Ruined By The Internet? - the show where we examine how technology is shaping modern life - whether we want it to or not.Follow or subscribe to never miss the next investigation - new episodes regularly.Visit us: https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/Help us investigate ourselves: https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/survey/Support the show: https://buymeacoffee.com/rbtishowIn this episode we investigate how games-as-a-service transformed player relationships with the medium, examine the rise of microtransactions and subscription models and who they really serve, explore the democratisation of development through indie games and what it's produced, and ask whether the internet's connectivity has saved gaming culture or simply created new ways to exploit it.00:00 - Introduction and Steve's journey to video game journalism02:22 - The internet's impact on gaming: the good, the bad, and the predatory04:31 - Games as a service: how consumer behaviour changed and why07:19 - From local to online: how connectivity changed the community experience11:49 - The evolution of game design and storytelling in a connected world15:38 - Quality control in the age of day-one patches and rushed releases17:59 - Community feedback and developer response: does it actually work?21:27 - Indie games, nostalgia, and the democratisation of game development27:02 - Navigating healthy versus toxic gaming communities29:03 - Esports, competitive gaming, and how it affects the casual player experience34:18 - Finding your place in a modern gaming landscape designed to monetise you36:46 - The financialisation of gaming: microtransactions, early access, and subscriptions41:00 - The future of gaming: subscription models, ownership, and AI-driven experiences46:10 - The positive impact of connectivity on gaming cultureGuest links - Steve WrightWebsite: https://stevivor.comBluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/stevivor.comInstagram: http://instagram.com/stevivorFacebook: http://facebook.com/stevivorYouTube: http://www.youtube.com/c/stevivorDiscord: https://discord.gg/7YXk6DcSTwitch: https://www.twitch.tv/stevivor
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Journalism & News: From Fact-Checking to Attention-Seeking? | Media Trust, Misinformation & Citizen Journalism
The internet promised unlimited reach, direct engagement, and a more informed world. But has it instead devalued expertise - creating a clicks and outrage economy where speed reigns over accuracy, and trust in journalism has never been lower?We're joined by John DeDakis - award-winning novelist, writing coach, public speaker, and former CNN Senior Copy Editor - who spent his career at the sharp end of broadcast journalism and understands better than most what the internet did to the craft, the industry, and the public's ability to tell truth from noise.Welcome to Ruined By The Internet? - the show where we examine how technology is shaping modern life - whether we want it to or not.Follow or subscribe to never miss the next investigation - new episodes regularly.Visit us: https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/Help us investigate ourselves: https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/survey/Support the show: https://buymeacoffee.com/rbtishowIn this episode we investigate how the internet transformed journalism from a trusted institution into a clicks-driven economy, examine the rise of citizen journalism and what it costs when everyone is a reporter, explore AI's role in accelerating both the misinformation crisis and potential solutions, and ask whether media literacy is enough to save an informed society - or whether the damage is already done.00:00 - John's journey through journalism and what it taught him02:16 - How the internet fundamentally changed what journalism is03:52 - Scepticism, trust, and why digital news is so hard to believe06:25 - The challenges facing editors in a speed-over-accuracy culture08:48 - The shift toward clickbait and what happened to investigative journalism11:35 - The rise of citizen journalism: democratisation or dangerous free-for-all?13:55 - The role of AI in journalism: tool, threat, or both?16:37 - The future of content creation in a world of infinite noise19:14 - The ethics of AI in journalism: where are the lines?21:19 - Substack and the future of individual journalism: salvation or fragmentation?24:08 - How journalism has evolved in the digital age - for better and worse30:15 - Media literacy and education: is it enough to save us?37:08 - The role of public broadcasting in a fractured media landscape42:50 - Is there genuine hope for the future of journalism?45:18 - Curiosity as the most important skill a writer - or reader - can haveGuest links - John DeDakisWebsite: https://johndedakis.com/Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/stores/author/B002BM6WM0Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/dedakisjohn/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/john.dedakisBluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/johndedakis.bsky.social
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Broadcast Television: The Digital Dismantling of an Entire Industry? | Streaming, Netflix & On-Demand Viewing
By replacing linear, scheduled programming with vast libraries of on-demand content, has the internet toppled the business models and power structures of traditional television for good - or just created a new set of gatekeepers in different packaging?We're joined by Amanda Lotz - award-winning author, professor, and research leader at Queensland University of Technology's Digital Media Research Centre - whose work on the post-network era makes her one of the world's leading authorities on what the internet did to television, and where it's heading next.Welcome to Ruined By The Internet? - the show where we examine how technology is shaping modern life - whether we want it to or not.Follow or subscribe to never miss the next investigation - new episodes regularly.Visit us: https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/Help us investigate ourselves: https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/survey/Support the show: https://buymeacoffee.com/rbtishowIn this episode we investigate how on-demand viewing dismantled the traditional broadcast model, examine Netflix's role in reshaping audience expectations and industry metrics, explore what the fragmentation of television means for local content and public broadcasting, and ask whether we're living through a golden age of television - or just an age of overwhelming choice.00:00 - The evolution of television and how media studies has tried to keep up03:02 - The internet's impact on traditional broadcast television05:34 - The post-network era explained: what it means and why it matters08:12 - How audience behaviour and viewing habits have fundamentally changed10:34 - The role of technology in reshaping the viewing experience itself13:21 - Why on-demand viewing was always inevitable, and what that tells us15:45 - Netflix's influence on the streaming landscape and viewer expectations18:14 - The Australian broadcasting landscape in a global streaming world20:41 - How success is measured in a fragmented, algorithm-driven market25:02 - Understanding Netflix's viewing patterns and what they reveal27:17 - Traditional broadcasters versus streaming disruption: who survives?30:59 - Are we really living through a new golden age of television?33:22 - Local content quotas in Australia: protection or futile resistance?37:05 - The future of traditional broadcasting: slow decline or reinvention?42:50 - The evolution of video consumption and where it ends upGuest links - Amanda LotzWebsite: https://amandalotz.comAmazon: https://www.amazon.com.au/stores/Amanda-D.-Lotz/author/B001JSDEIWLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/adlotz/Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/drtvlotz.bsky.social
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The Job Hunt: Built to Harvest Data, not People? | AI Recruitment, Job Applications & Hiring Technology
It was once a very human-centric process. But has the internet transformed looking for work into an automated, opaque, and intensely competitive digital gauntlet - where algorithms screen you out before a human ever reads your name?We're joined by Edan Haddock - Global Head of Talent and People Experience at Movember - who works at the meeting point of human connection and hiring technology, and is exactly the right person to ask about what happens if recruitment becomes a purely digital process.Welcome to Ruined By The Internet? - the show where we examine how technology is shaping modern life - whether we want it to or not.Follow or subscribe to never miss the next investigation - new episodes regularly.Visit us: https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/Help us investigate ourselves: https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/survey/Support the show: https://buymeacoffee.com/rbtishowIn this episode we investigate how AI and automation have reshaped the recruitment process from both sides, examine the ethical implications of algorithmic hiring and the biases it encodes, explore what it takes to maintain genuine human connection in a virtualised hiring environment, and ask whether the future of recruitment will be more human than ever - or less.00:00 - Introduction to Movember and Edan's role in talent and people experience03:07 - The evolution of talent acquisition: how technology changed everything05:20 - The impact of digital communication on interviews and what gets lost08:12 - Building genuine human connections in a digitalised hiring process10:55 - The application process: quality versus quantity and who wins13:21 - The biggest misconceptions in talent acquisition today15:49 - The role of AI in recruitment: where it helps and where it doesn't18:34 - The AI arms race in hiring: candidates versus algorithms22:47 - Addressing bias in AI recruitment: can it ever be truly fair?26:56 - How AI can enhance rather than replace the candidate experience32:36 - Practical strategies for candidates trying to stand out in a digital pile35:09 - Creative approaches in recruitment that cut through the noise37:16 - The future of job searching and recruitment: more human or less?Guest links - Edan HaddockPodcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/au/podcast/edan-haddock-total-talent/id1833735442
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Dating & Relationships: A Dehumanising Paradox of Infinite Choice? | Dating Apps, Online Dating & Digital Relationships
The internet promised unprecedented connection. But has it instead damaged the quality and authenticity of dating - offering endless choice, a shopping mentality, and a reduced emphasis on the kind of genuine, in-person connection that actually leads somewhere?We're joined by Elly Klein - professional dating mentor, author, and founder of Your Dating Bestie - whose career is built on helping people navigate a dating landscape the internet fundamentally broke, and who has seen every way the apps fail the people using them.Welcome to Ruined By The Internet? - the show where we examine how technology is shaping modern life - whether we want it to or not.Follow or subscribe to never miss the next investigation - new episodes regularly.Visit us: https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/Help us investigate ourselves: https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/survey/Support the show: https://buymeacoffee.com/rbtishowIn this episode we investigate how online dating transformed romance into a numbers game, examine the pitfalls that trap even the most well-intentioned daters, explore how generational attitudes toward dating have shifted in a swipe-driven world, and ask whether the perfect dating profile is the solution, or part of the problem.00:00 - The internet's impact on dating and what it fundamentally changed03:09 - The most common pitfalls of online dating and how to avoid them06:10 - The numbers game: why online dating feels like a full time job09:01 - The shopping mentality in dating and what it's doing to genuine connection12:01 - Crafting a dating profile that actually represents who you are15:07 - Understanding preferences and filters: helpful boundaries or missed opportunities?22:35 - Navigating preferences in dating: where to hold firm and where to stay open29:01 - How technology is changing the nature of relationships themselves35:03 - Practical strategies for success in the online dating landscape39:23 - Recognising and overcoming burnout in the digital dating world43:12 - The power of perseverance and positivity when dating feels impossibleGuest links - Elly KleinWebsite: https://yourdatingbestie.comBlog: https://www.ellyklein.com/blog
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Magic & Illusion: Secrets Killed 60 Seconds at a Time? | Illusion, Social Media & Performance Art
By demystifying the craft, exposing its secrets, and reducing complex tricks to bite-sized content, has the internet eroded the very foundation of magic - mystery itself?We're joined by Cosentino - Australia's most successful magician, illusionist, and escape artist, known to audiences around the world as The Grand Illusionist - who has built a career on creating wonder in a world that wants to know how everything works, and has more to say about the internet's impact on his craft than you might expect.Welcome to Ruined By The Internet? - the show where we examine how technology is shaping modern life - whether we want it to or not.Follow or subscribe to never miss the next investigation - new episodes regularly.Visit us: https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/Help us investigate ourselves: https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/survey/Support the show: https://buymeacoffee.com/rbtishowIn this episode we investigate how social media and digital exposure have changed the relationship between magicians and their audiences, examine the tension between transparency and mystery in a world that can Google anything, explore how technology has simultaneously threatened and enhanced the art of illusion, and ask whether wonder can survive in an age of instant answers.00:00 - The journey to becoming The Grand Illusionist04:07 - How technology changed the art and business of magic07:37 - The evolution of performance styles in a digital age12:05 - Navigating fame and social media as a performing artist17:06 - The tension between keeping secrets and the internet's hunger for exposure22:47 - How magic has evolved to survive - and thrive - in the digital age27:45 - The impact of technology on live magic performance31:46 - The art of creating genuine wonder when audiences have seen everything37:13 - How Cosentino leverages technology to enhance rather than diminish the craft41:20 - Advice for aspiring magicians trying to build a career in a demystified worldGuest links - CosentinoWebsite: https://www.cosentino.com.au/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thecosentino/YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/officialcosentinoFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/TheCosentino/TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@thecosentino
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Child Safety: Public Platforms Full of Private Predators? | Online Safety, Cyberbullying, Social Media & Digital Parenting
Many people - especially parents - feel that the internet has seriously compromised the safety, wellbeing, and innocence of young people, exposing them to risks the offline world struggles to contain. But is that really the case, and if so, what can actually be done about it?We're joined by Brett Lee - Cyber Safety Advocate, Author, and Founder of Internet Safe Education - who has spent his career on the frontline of this issue, working directly with young people, parents, and schools, and has seen the full spectrum of what the internet does to children when adults aren't paying attention.Welcome to Ruined By The Internet? - the show where we examine how technology is shaping modern life - whether we want it to or not.Follow or subscribe to never miss the next investigation - new episodes regularly.Visit us: https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/Help us investigate ourselves: https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/survey/Support the show: https://buymeacoffee.com/rbtishowIn this episode we investigate how online risks to young people have evolved as the internet has changed, examine the platform features specifically harmful to younger users and why they exist, explore the role parents can realistically play in protecting children in a digital world, and ask whether legislation and community action can ever keep pace with the risks the internet keeps creating.00:00 - Introduction to cyber safety education and why it matters03:08 - How internet dangers have evolved as the technology has changed05:56 - Online predators: who they are, how they operate, and why young people are vulnerable09:38 - How technology shapes young people's perception of the world11:52 - The platform features most harmful to young users and why they exist17:07 - Age restrictions on social media: do they actually work?19:30 - Cyberbullying and anonymity: the dangers of a world where school never ends25:53 - The role parents can realistically play, and how technology also enables creativity27:55 - Practical strategies for safer technology use that actually work31:37 - Peer pressure, legislation, and who is ultimately responsible for keeping kids safe35:10 - The positive online spaces that exist for young people38:04 - Navigating social media risks without demonising the technology entirely41:25 - Communication, grassroots efforts, and final advice for concerned parentsGuest links - Brett LeeWebsite: https://www.internetsafeeducation.com/
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Attention Spans: A Short-Form Destruction of Focus? | Dopamine, Cognitive Science & Social Media
Thanks to the constant stream of information, endless notifications, and explosion of rapid-fire short-form content, are we losing our capacity for sustained focus and deep concentration - or is that just the latest moral panic about technology?We're joined by Dr Patrick Clarke - Clinical Psychologist and Associate Professor at Curtin University - whose research into attention and cognition puts him at the exact point where the science meets the scroll, and who brings evidence to a conversation usually driven by assumption.Welcome to Ruined By The Internet? - the show where we examine how technology is shaping modern life - whether we want it to or not.Follow or subscribe to never miss the next investigation - new episodes regularly.Visit us: https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/Help us investigate ourselves: https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/survey/Support the show: https://buymeacoffee.com/rbtishowIn this episode we investigate how our interaction with technology is changing our attention habits, examine what the research actually says about attention spans in the digital age, explore the relationship between short-form content, social media, and mental health, and ask whether our fundamental cognitive abilities are genuinely declining - or simply adapting to a new environment.00:00 - Introduction to attention, focus, and digital devices02:48 - Understanding the different types of attention and why it matters09:20 - Attention span in the digital age: what's actually changing?11:00 - What the research really says about attention over time13:10 - The impact of personal interest on our ability to focus15:13 - Task switching, focus, and the cost of constant interruption17:44 - Brain plasticity and how our minds adapt to digital environments21:40 - Social media, short-form content, and their effect on cognitive engagement23:27 - The relationship between cognitive load and anxiety levels24:12 - What rapid-fire short-form content is actually doing to our brains27:07 - Social media's specific influence on mental health30:46 - Digital interactions versus real-life relationships: what gets lost32:38 - Practical strategies for improving focus in a distracted world38:38 - Reassessing our attention span concerns: are we worrying about the right things?Guest links - Dr Patrick ClarkeUniversity profile: https://staffportal.curtin.edu.au/staff/profile/view/patrick-clarke-ec8428e9/
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Ruined By The Internet? - Trailer
Is the internet actually ruining everything, or are we just looking at it wrong?Welcome to Ruined By The Internet? - the show where we examine how technology is shaping modern life - whether we want it to or not.Through conversations with leading experts, we explore the evidence to uncover the true casualties of the web.Help us investigate ourselves at https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/survey/Follow the show, let us know what else to look into at https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/, or support us at https://buymeacoffee.com/rbtishow
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
Is the internet really ruining everything, or are we just looking at it wrong?Ruined By The Internet? explores how social media, AI, and technology are shaping society, culture, and modern life; including how we think, behave, and connect - whether we want it to or not.From internet culture to the psychological and human impact of tech, we look at the digital world not as a set of products, but as the environment we all live in.Through conversations with leading experts from around the world, we seek to uncover the true casualties behind today’s biggest questions: How is social media changing us? Is AI reshaping human behaviour? And what are the real consequences of our very online lives?Let us know what to look into at https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/, or support the show at https://buymeacoffee.com/rbtishow
HOSTED BY
Gareth King - uncovering the human cost of the digital world
CATEGORIES
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