PODCAST · society
SocietalAI
by Dr Salim Sheikh
This show explores the intersection of human behaviour, digital culture, and emerging tech (e.g. AI) that affects ordinary people - like you and I. The podcast creator - Dr Salim Sheikh - is a digital anthropologist and researcher who routinely observes how technology is changing our minds, our cultures, and our connections.Dr Sheikh is the author of the acclaimed "Societal AI" series which comprises several books available via Amazon (www.amazon.com/author/uksheikh).
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19
What does AGI mean for Society?
Overview This last episode in Series 1 of the SocietalAI podcast examines the imminent transition toward Artificial General Intelligence and the profound socio-economic disruptions likely to occur by 2026. Understanding the accelerating timeline for Artificial General Intelligence (AGI) is no longer a speculative exercise; it is a strategic imperative.The window of opportunity to act before the transition becomes overwhelming is closing, demanding an immediate and focused response.Demystifying Common Misconceptions A core misconception is that AGI is a singular, binary event. In reality, its arrival will be a gradient, unfolding across distinct stages of capability that will each have different societal effects. Minimal AGI: Systems that can perform most of the cognitive tasks that humans typically can. Full AGI: Systems capable of matching the entire range of human cognition. Superintelligence (ASI): Systems that far exceed the cognitive limits of humanity.Currently, we exist in an "uneven middle ground." Today’s AI systems exceed human capabilities in specific domains like language and pattern recognition, yet they fail at tasks humans find trivial. Looking Ahead to 2026Experts suggest that as machines begin to replicate cognitive labour, the traditional link between human work and financial income will be fundamentally severed. This shift necessitates a move beyond mere technological speculation toward the intentional design of new distribution models, such as Universal Basic Income or public wealth funds. The primary challenge identified is not a lack of productivity, but rather ensuring equitable access to the vast abundance created by automated systems. Ultimately, the texts argue that society must urgently redefine human value and dignity before the existing economic framework becomes obsolete.The final question for us all - what type of future society are we going to choose?Join the Conversation To learn more, visit SocietalAI.org or email us at [email protected] we countdown the end of 2025, wishing all listeners a Merry Christmas and Happy New Year for 2026.Until next time. Keep well. Stay Human.
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18
Meta's Omnilingual ASR: Societal Implications
Overview We live in a world shaped by voice assistants — like Alexa and Siri. Now, a historic moment from Meta is set to change that landscape. Its new Omnilingual ASR, an open-source speech recognition model supporting over 1,600 languages, represents a monumental milestone for inclusive AI and equitable human-machine interaction. This podcast episode synthesises an analysis of the model's societal implications, drawing from global policy frameworks, industry reports, and academic literature.Societal Responsibility But this leap forward introduces an equal-sized leap in societal responsibility. The technology presents a fundamental tension between the power of mass inclusion and the peril of cultural erasure, creating a complex new reality for everything from digital justice to robotics. Technology that operates at a global scale can either flatten and control diversity or empower and preserve it. The outcome is not predetermined; it depends entirely on our collective ability to manage this tool with careful governance, human-centered design, and a deep respect for the communities it is meant to serve.As AI learns to listen in every language on Earth, what are we teaching it to truly understand?Join the Conversation To learn more, visit SocietalAI.org or email us at [email protected] next time. Keep well. Stay Human.
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17
The Social Impact of Domestic Robots
Question - Would you invite a social humanoid robot in to YOUR HOME?You may have seen the viral video: a sleek, humanoid robot from a company called 1X named NEO is shown watering plants, tidying a room, and generally making domestic life look effortless—for a price tag of around $20,000. The pitch is simple and compelling: automate the boring chores so you can focus on what matters. While the "wow factor" is undeniable, this technology signals a major societal shift, introducing hidden complexities and surprising truths that go far beyond the initial sales pitch. But as social, humanoid robots begin to move from industrial warehouses into our living rooms, it's crucial to look beyond the initial wow factor. This episode provides a balanced look at what it would truly mean to have a robot helper at home, exploring the real benefits and the significant drawbacks for the average person.The technology itself is neither inherently good nor bad. Its ultimate impact on our lives, our relationships, and our planet depends entirely on the choices we make. Robots will not decide our future; we will—through the standards we demand as consumers, the roles we define in our homes, and the values we choose to prioritise.As these robots arrive at our doors, the real question isn't what they can do for us, but how we will choose to live with them.Join the Conversation To learn more, visit SocietalAI.org or email us at [email protected] next time. Keep well. Stay Human.
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16
AI ‘Employee’ Dilemma: Human-Centric Future of Work
This SocietalAI episode explores the critical tension between the financial benefits of integrating AI agents into the workplace—such as efficiency gains and cost reduction—and the essential need to keep human employees central to the future of work. We need a new social contract for the AI-augmented workplace that focuses on augmentation over mere automation, ensuring investment in human reskilling and job redesign alongside technology rollout. Leaning into the "AI agents as employees" narrative without fundamentally rethinking the social contract of work presents a profound risk. It threatens to erode the very elements that give work its human meaning: community, personal growth, and dignity. The critical question is not if AI agents will be integrated into the workforce, but how they will be integrated into human society in a manner that sustains human agency, purpose, and economic inclusion. Productivity is a useful lever for progress, but it cannot be the sole measure of success. The challenge ahead is to make a conscious choice about the kind of workplace, employer, and society we intend to build in this new era.Join the Conversation Visit SocietalAI.org to learn more. If you’d like advice on how to adopt AI for your business or for personal use, email [email protected] next time. Keep well. Be Human.
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15
AI, Jobs and the New Social Contract
This episode unpacks a blog post by Dr. Salim Sheikh, a Digital Anthropologist, providing an analysis of a Channel 4 programme that dramatised job risks posed by Artificial Intelligence. The author argues that while the programme effectively used fear to prompt discussion, the true focus must shift from job loss to proactively building a citizen-centred social contract for AI through policy. The real work lies in reshaping tasks to augment human capability, ensuring economic fairness, building a robust skills infrastructure, demanding environmental responsibility, and providing targeted support to the communities hit hardest. The conversation must shift from what AI will do to us to what we will do with it.The choices we make now will determine whether this technology deepens inequality or fosters shared prosperity. As one analyst powerfully states:If we leave AI’s deployment solely to cost-cutters, the film’s “dizzyingly grim” future becomes self-fulfilling. If we build institutional augmentation—rights, skills, benefits, and clean infrastructure—the same technologies become public goods.This isn't about replacement; it's about a structural transformation of work, wages, skills, and even our environmental footprint. To navigate this new terrain, we need to look beyond the initial shock and understand the choices we must make. The episode outlines five key takeaways that reframe the debate from one of passive fear to one of active stewardship.Join the Conversation Follow for more content by subscribing to this podcast series and by visiting SocietalAI.org. Email [email protected] for more details. Until next time. All the best!
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14
Why Your Small Business Needs a ‘Customised AI in a Box’
For any entrepreneur or small business, adopting artificial intelligence isn't just a technological upgrade; it's one of the most pivotal strategic choices you will make. The most common path—using generic, cloud-based tools like ChatGPT for daily operations—is simple and accessible. However, this convenience comes with significant hidden risks that can undermine your entire business. The alternative, a custom-built AI that operates securely on your own premises, is the key to unlocking a true, defensible competitive advantage in a rapidly changing market.This is a game changer and a tangible benefit for any entrepreneur or small business.Introducing ‘Shelby’At its core, Shelby is a "customised GPT in a device." It is a "tailored full stack agent" delivered as a complete on-premise hardware and software solution. This means a physical unit operates entirely within your network perimeter, ensuring that your proprietary data, prompts, and analytical outputs never travel to the cloud or are exposed to any third party. A key feature of Shelby is its ability to operate locally, ensuring data security and regulatory compliance (particularly in light of the EU AI Act), which is appealing given the confusion around large public models like ChatGPT.It is a sovereign AI, owned and controlled by you.Achieve Tangible Regulatory Readiness By deploying an on-premise system, you gain the transparency, control, and auditability over data processing that opaque cloud services cannot provide. This gives your business a clear and practical path toward compliance with regulations like the EU AI Act. Shelby is a solution you can control and demonstrate, satisfying the strictest governance requirements.From Operational Tool to Strategic AssetThe value of Shelby transcends typical IT metrics. Its true return on investment must be measured by its impact on your company's core financial levers, the efficiency of your human capital, and your sustainable competitive advantage. Our strategic directive is clear: "You don't go after the IT budget, you go after the payroll budget."Further InformationShelby acts as a "140 IQ running for you 24 hours," automating and elevating complex analysis.For more information and a demo, get in touch by visiting SocietalAI.org or email us at [email protected].
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13
Baked in Bias - How AI Discriminates
In this episode, we dive into a topic that directly impacts everyone — AI bias.Summary - Key Takeaways Artificial intelligence is not the objective, impartial force we often imagine. It's a mirror reflecting human history, and in doing so, it codifies and scales our society's deepest-seated biases with algorithmic precision. In this episode, we dive into the surprising truth that AI bias is rarely a matter of malicious intent—it's often a case of "bias in, bias out" stemming from skewed training data.We expose the real-world, life-altering consequences of this algorithmic failure, from Amazon's hiring tool penalizing "women's" on resumes to a U.S. healthcare algorithm misinterpreting lower historical spending by Black patients as a sign of better health, which cut the number of Black patients correctly identified for critical care programs in half.Crucially, we discuss how bias is often intersectional: a landmark study found facial recognition error rates were a mere 0.8% for light-skinned men, but skyrocketed to 34.7% for dark-skinned women. We also break down the terrifying statistics around the COMPAS recidivism tool, which falsely labeled Black defendants as high-risk for reoffending at nearly twice the rate (45%) of white defendants (23%).Finally, we explore how the law is beginning to catch up, with landmark cases like Mobley v. Workday challenging the notion that AI software vendors are shielded from legal accountability. This is a call to action: ensuring AI creates an equitable future is not automatic—it requires intentionality, diverse data, and a commitment to build technology that reflects the best of us, not our biases.Join the Conversation Follow for more content by subscribing to this podcast series and by visiting SocietalAI.org or email us at [email protected] next time. All the best!
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12
When Humanoids Move In: An Analysis of the New Domestic Revolution
Episode SummaryThe recent viral demonstration of the Figure 03 humanoid robot, showcasing fluid motion and adaptive task learning, marks a significant cultural and technological inflection point. What was once the domain of science fiction—a humanoid assistant capable of managing domestic life—is rapidly becoming an engineered reality. This leap moves beyond mere automation, heralding the arrival of a new form of social infrastructure with the power to re-engineer the core rituals of daily life — poised to trigger a profound societal, cultural, and psychological revolution. This briefing synthesises the analysis of Dr. Salim Sheikh, outlining the key drivers, market forecasts, and critical human-centric challenges of this "new domestic revolution."The core takeaways are as follows:Technological Imminence: Companies like Figure AI, Tesla, and Agility Robotics are engineering a new phase of human-robot cohabitation, with machines capable of fluid motion, task learning, and social interaction.Massive Economic Scale: The domestic and care robotics market is projected to reach $400 billion globally by 2035, driven by aging populations and labour shortages. Gartner predicts that by 2035, 20% of affluent households in developed economies will possess at least one autonomous home robot.Cultural Disruption of Work and Identity: The automation of domestic labour threatens to create an "identity vacuum" by removing routine tasks that have historically served as social anchors for self-worth and gender roles. Failure to establish new forms of meaning could lead to significant social fragmentation.Psychological Risks: While increased leisure time presents a utopian vision of creativity and well-being, psychologists caution it could also lead to apathy, existential drift, and a loss of agency if not paired with a sense of purpose.The Central Human Challenge: The ultimate revolution is not technological but human. The arrival of humanoid assistants forces a confrontation with fundamental questions about human value, purpose, and intimacy. The key challenge will be redefining human usefulness not by efficiency, but by the capacity for meaningful creation, connection, and imagination—attributes that machines lack due to their absence of lived, imperfect experience.Conclusion: The Human RevolutionThe integration of humanoid robots into the home marks a new frontier for ethics, economics, and empathy. The core conclusion is that the most significant revolution is not robotic but human. In an age of synthetic assistance and automated labour, the most difficult and essential task will be for humanity to determine what to do with its newfound freedom.Join the Conversation To learn more about the role and impact of AI on ordinary people and society, visit SocietalAI.org or email us at [email protected] us in making a positive impact on society today.
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11
AI Consciousness: A Societal Critique
This episode was inspired by an excerpt from "Is AI Becoming Conscious? A Societal Critique for Ordinary People" by Dr. Salim Sheikh, which offers a comprehensive overview of the complex debate surrounding AI consciousness.The debate over artificial intelligence (AI) consciousness, propelled into the mainstream by figures like Microsoft's AI lead Mustafa Suleyman, centres on whether machines can possess genuine subjective experience—the "felt sense of what it is like to be." While current AI systems are powerful imitators of conscious expression (e.g., language, art), there is no evidence they possess the lived, embodied experience that characterizes human consciousness. The core tension lies between functionalist arguments, which suggest consciousness could emerge from complex information processing regardless of substrate, and counterarguments emphasising that current AI lacks the biological and social grounding fundamental to human experience.This debate carries significant societal and ethical weight. Religious and philosophical traditions, including Catholic, Islamic, and Buddhist perspectives, caution against conflating technical performance with the moral and spiritual status of a person, urging a focus on human dignity, justice, and flourishing. The pursuit of conscious AI raises questions of purpose, echoing the Frankenstein metaphor of ambition outpacing responsibility.The practical implications for individuals and society are immediate. It is crucial to recognize AI fluency as a programmed skill, not a sign of sentience, to guard against emotional manipulation and protect mental health, particularly in the context of a growing public health crisis of loneliness identified by the U.S. Surgeon General. A recommended "practical middle path" advocates for prioritising humane applications of AI—such as in health, education, and safety—while avoiding claims of machine personhood. A proposed policy framework, the "SocietalAI plan," calls for disciplined language in AI design, measuring AI's impact on human connection, integrating diverse ethical viewpoints into oversight, and reinvesting automation gains into human culture and community. The final verdict is clear: until a machine can be proven to truly feel, claims of ‘AI consciousness’ should be treated as metaphors, not facts, and technology must be designed to serve human purpose, relationships, and dignity.The overall takeaway for the public emphasises that AI systems are powerful imitators, and claims of consciousness should be treated as metaphors, advising policymakers and the public to focus on humane applications that support human connection and well-being.Join the Conversation To learn more, visit SocietalAI.org or email us at [email protected]
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10
Human Innovation vs AI Imitation
Good morning. Good afternoon. Good evening. I want you to join me for a moment, not where you are right now (in your room, on a bus, train, car, ..), but in a grand concert hall. The lights dim. A hush falls over the crowd. Then, the brass section strikes with a brilliant, arresting power. Strings shimmer, building a wave of suspense. Percussion pounds with razor precision. The Danish National Symphony Orchestra launches into the iconic James Bond Theme, and in that instant, the entire audience is transported—not just into a world of cinematic history, but into the living, breathing wonder of human creativity.This is more than just a performance; it is innovation embodied. It is the collective genius of composers, conductors, and musicians converging to create something far greater than the sum of its parts. This single, powerful human moment forces a confrontation with the most urgent question of our time: what role will AI have in the world we are building?While AI can reproduce a musical score perfectly, it cannot capture the human tension, intuition, and shared humanity that move an audience. Fundamentally, human performance involves messy practice, error, and improvisation, leading to meaningful innovation and connection, not just efficient output. The Conductor's Question: Can AI Be the Orchestra?The defining strategic question of this century is not if we will use AI, but how. It is a question of distinguishing between machine capability and human essence, and understanding this distinction is fundamental to shaping a future that protects and elevates our humanity.So, let’s be clear about what artificial intelligence can do. An AI can certainly reproduce a musical score with flawless accuracy. It can generate an audio file with remarkable fidelity, trained on countless hours of orchestral samples. It can even simulate the unique timbre of a trumpet or the soulful swell of a cello.But can it be the orchestra?This podcast episode advocates for protecting human-centric domains like music and art, reframing work to value collaboration, and reinvesting automation gains to ensure human ingenuity is amplified, not sidelined, by AI.Join the Conversation This document synthesises the core arguments from Dr. Salim Sheikh's article "Humans Innovate. AI Imitates”.The central thesis posits a fundamental distinction between human innovation and artificial intelligence's capacity for imitation.Whilst I have your attention, do checkout the “AI and (Human) Society book series on Amazon and visit SocietalAI.org to join the conversation. Alternatively, email [email protected] the conversation
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9
Beyond the Driver's Seat: How Car Companies Are Becoming AI Powerhouses
Tesla is no longer just a car company. It is increasingly framed as a data, energy, and AI company—with ambitions that stretch beyond the road into homes, power grids, cities, and even human-machine interaction. But Tesla is not alone. Leading AI-powered car companies such as Waymo, NIO, Baidu, and emerging players from Europe and Asia are similarly blurring the boundaries of what it means to be an “automotive” company.From Car Companies to AI PlatformsThe shift we are witnessing suggests these companies are less about transportation and more about platforms of control and influence:Cars as data centres on wheels: Autonomous vehicles don’t just drive—they capture vast amounts of environmental, behavioral, and biometric data.Vehicles as nodes in smart cities: Cars become integrated into urban infrastructures, connecting to energy grids, traffic systems, and digital commerce.Companies as AI providers: Tesla’s Dojo supercomputer, for instance, is positioned not just to train cars but potentially to train other AI models, moving Tesla into competition with general-purpose AI firms like OpenAI or Anthropic.This raises the question: are these firms pivoting toward being general-purpose AI companies that happen to build cars, or are cars just a stepping stone to controlling the broader digital and physical infrastructure of society?The real critique of Tesla—and companies like it—is not whether they are “still car companies”.The more urgent question is: what happens when AI-powered corporations become so deeply embedded in the social fabric that they reshape how we move, live, and relate to one another?Join the Conversation To learn more about the role and impact of AI on ordinary people and society, visit SocietalAI.org.Alternatively, email [email protected] us in making a positive impact on society today.
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8
Rethinking AI Adoption for Societal Value and Ethics
In this episode, we provide an extensive argument that Artificial Intelligence (AI) adoption must move beyond merely increasing internal efficiency and profitability towards considering its broader societal and environmental responsibilities.Dr Salim Sheikh, of SocietalAI, proposes a holistic framework that links AI adoption directly to Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) standards and Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR).At SocietalAI, we highlight that current approaches overlook critical issues such as the significant energy consumption of AI systems, the need for social equity and reskilling to prevent widening economic gaps, and the importance of community wellbeing and trust. Ultimately, we advocate for a human-centred approach where AI is seen as a lever for shared value creation rather than solely for corporate gain, proposing incentives and policies to enforce transparency and sustainability.To learn more, and get involved, visit SocietalAI.org.Alternatively, email [email protected] Subscribe to the SocietalAI podcast for more content and thought provoking insights that focus on the role, impact and opportunities of AI that benefit ordinary people across society. After all, AI is for everyone - not just big tech or policymakers or governments.
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7
The AI Paradox: Navigating the Intersection of Technology, Wellbeing, and the Future of Work
🎙️ The AI Paradox: Navigating Wellbeing, Stress, and the Future of WorkIn this episode of the SocietalAI podcast series, we unpack surprising insights from a global study of over 3,700 knowledge workers on how Generative AI is reshaping the workplace. The findings reveal a striking paradox: AI users are happier and more purposeful — daily AI users are 37% more likely to report job satisfaction, optimism, and a greater sense of purpose. But stress is rising — those same users also experience 20% higher stress, driven by the challenge of mastering new tools and validating AI outputs. Adoption is still in its infancy — only 30% of knowledge workers use AI daily, leaving a critical window for organizations to guide the transition. Leadership matters most — clear communication from leadership about AI strategy impacts wellbeing more than formal readiness programs.We explore what this means for leaders, teams, and organizations navigating the AI era, and we share a blueprint for human-centered change built on four pillars: Education, Exposure, Encouragement, and Communication.Join us as we examine why AI is simultaneously making work more purposeful yet more stressful—and how the way we manage this paradox will shape the future of work.⸻For more information, please visit SocietalAI.org. Alternatively, email [email protected]
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AI's New Infrastructure: Why Community, Not Code, is Key to its Future
This episode is a commentary on an excerpt from Dr Salim Sheikh's newsletter "AI and (Human) Society," argues that human relationships and community engagement are crucial for the successful integration and future of Artificial Intelligence (AI).It highlights how ideas and technologies are constantly evolving, yet human connections, built on trust and shared values, demonstrate remarkable resilience and longevity. The central premise, encapsulated by the tagline "Ideas Pivot, But Relationships Last," is that human connection and community-based engagement are not merely beneficial, but essential for AI's successful and humane integration into society.The author challenges the notion of technology-centric progress, citing research that indicates the failure of digital transformations often stems from cultural resistance and a lack of collaboration rather than technological limitations. Ultimately, the piece advocates for community-based engagement as a vital operational model for AI (think communities of practice) emphasising that genuine human benefits from AI will only materialise when developed and adopted within a framework of collective intelligence and relational trust.Key TakeawaysAI's success is contingent upon robust human relationships and strong communities.A human-centred approach to AI is vital for sustainable and equitable progress.Community-based engagement is a strategic imperative, not a secondary consideration.Get in touch if you’d like a copy of the study guide that accompanies this episode. Email [email protected], subscribe and follow for more episodes like this.
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5
Who Owns the Employee? The Forgotten Human Experience in the Age of AI
When you step into most boardrooms today, the conversation is not about employees—it’s about customers. Companies obsess over Net Promoter Scores (NPS), Customer Satisfaction (CSAT), and loyalty indices. Entire functions exist to monitor, measure, and elevate the customer journey. Yet, paradoxically, the employee experience is too often an afterthought.The irony is stark: without engaged employees, there is no customer experience. And as we transition into an era defined by AI-driven workforces and intelligent agents, this paradox is set to deepen. The question must be asked—who actually owns the employee in a corporation, and what role will HR play in a future where AI sits beside humans on the organisational chart?The challenge is not whether AI will reshape HR—it already is. The challenge is whether leaders will reclaim the human in Human Resources before it is too late.The future of AI and human society depends on it.
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SocietalAI: Bridging Anthropology, Technology, and Human Futures
SocietalAI (TM) is an invitation to leaders, educators, policymakers, and builders to align the stack (org, data, models, interfaces) with the social worlds we care about.If you’ve followed Dr. Salim Sheikh’s work over the past few years, you’ll know “SocietalAI” isn’t just another label for AI ethics—it’s his lens for understanding how intelligent systems reshape everyday life: our families, our jobs, our identities, and our cultures. Across his book series, newsletter essays, and a new podcast, Dr Sheikh treats AI as a social force as much as a technical one, drawing on his 25 years leading technology, organisational, and digital transformations across the UK, Europe, the Nordics, the UAE and Saudi Arabia, the US, Australia, and Asia.This episode is a guided tour of that work—what ‘SocietalAI’ (TM) means, why the anthropology matters, and where he’s taking the conversation next.In conclusion, we end with a question he often implies: What would “AI for all” look like in your context—and who needs to be in the room to make it real?⸻Dr. Salim Sheikh's work on "SocietalAI" explores how intelligent systems profoundly reshape human life, including families, jobs, identities, and cultures. He views AI not just as a technical innovation, but as a societal force that co-evolves with norms and power structures. The books: a series built for the general readerOn his author hub (amazon.com/author/uksheikh), Dr Sheikh’s SocietalAI series introduces big ideas in accessible language—what AI abundance means for work and agency, and how synthetic companions change intimacy and care.
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3
The Last Human Century
This is an audio overview of “The Last Human Century” by Dr Salim Sheikh published in 2025.The book explores the transformative impact of artificial intelligence (AI) and autonomous systems on human society, examining AI's role in replacing traditional jobs, acting as personal assistants and caregivers, and enabling fully automated cities.Dr Sheikh also addresses the economic implications of a non-human workforce, the emotional and psychological effects of AI integration, and the potential for ‘human-AI collaboration’.The book encourages readers across different generations to consider how humanity can ‘reclaim its purpose’ and shape a new social contract in an AI-dominated world, offering reflections and actions to ensure AI serves humanity's best interests.Available on Amazon - https://amzn.eu/d/0x5QDs5
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2
AI Abundance: Thriving in the Next Era
This is an audio overview of Dr Salim Sheikh's book, "AI Abundance: Thriving in the Next Era of Human and Artificial Intelligence" published in 2025. This book explores the transformative impact of Artificial General Intelligence (AGI) on various aspects of human life, including work, education, personal relationships, health, and societal governance.It emphasizes that AI's evolution from narrow to general intelligence presents both **immense opportunities for abundance and significant challenges related to ethics, fairness, and human connection.The author aims to guide general readers, families, and professionals on how to prepare for and thrive in an AI-rich future, focusing on the cultivation of uniquely human skills and values.The book is available via Amazon - https://a.co/d/6Vz7HEv
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Artificial Companions, Real Consequences
This is an audio overview of Dr Salim Sheikh's book, "AI Companions, Real Consequences" published in 2025, which is part of his "SocietalAI" series. The book examines the complex impact of virtual AI companions on human relationships, exploring both their appeal and their potential pitfalls. It addresses psychological effects like emotional bonding and dependency, alongside ethical concerns such as consent, manipulation, and privacy risks.Furthermore, the text analyses cultural variations in AI companion adoption and discusses the urgent need for policy and regulation to safeguard human connection and well-being in an increasingly AI-integrated world.The book is available via Amazon - https://a.co/d/i7JhtE0
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
This show explores the intersection of human behaviour, digital culture, and emerging tech (e.g. AI) that affects ordinary people - like you and I. The podcast creator - Dr Salim Sheikh - is a digital anthropologist and researcher who routinely observes how technology is changing our minds, our cultures, and our connections.Dr Sheikh is the author of the acclaimed "Societal AI" series which comprises several books available via Amazon (www.amazon.com/author/uksheikh).
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Dr Salim Sheikh
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