A Usable Past for a Democratic Future: How Looking Backward Can Help Us Navigate the Digital Revolution

October 27, 2021 -
5:00pm to 6:30pm

Lizzie O’Shea
Lawyer and writer
​Founder of Digital Rights Watch

Abstract: Too often, technology is presented without context. It is treated as a natural phenomenon or a force of nature, inevitable and unstoppable. To make sense of our digital present, there is an instinctive sense that we need to imagine the future, and bend society around the path determined for us by tech. 

But making technology is a human activity, and the technological problems we face are human problems. An understanding of history, philosophy, sociology, and the arts is invaluable to making sense of these problems. If we want to reclaim the present as the cause of a different future, we don't just need coders and engineers, we need people from all different disciplines to collaborate and make the most of the potential of the digital revolution.

Through this collaboration, we can create a digital future in which we are not treated as nameless cohorts to be processed by machines, or raw data for analyzing, but instead understood as people with agency, dignity, curiosity, and desire to shape our own destiny. The stakes could not be higher: as we face problems like the climate crisis, wealth inequality, and the decay of social democracies, it is vital that we find ways to make technology work for the many, not the few.

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