tristan-harris-warning
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| Not doomsday. Not sci fi panic. Just a guy trying to keep humanity from speed running its own sequel to the social media mess. | Not doomsday. Not sci fi panic. Just a guy trying to keep humanity from speed running its own sequel to the social media mess. | ||
| - | **“Before AI Goes Off the Rails”** | + | |
| #HumaneTech # | #HumaneTech # | ||
| + | {{ youtube> | ||
| - | https:// | ||
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| + | **Before AI Goes Off the Rails** | ||
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| + | Tristan Harris is basically Silicon Valley’s smoke alarm—the thing everyone hears, everyone ignores, and everyone swears they’ll deal with “later.” He’s the former Google insider who looked at your favorite apps and said, “Congrats, | ||
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| + | While tech CEOs were busy bragging about “engagement, | ||
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| + | He’s also the reason everyone suddenly pretends they’ve always cared about “digital well‑being, | ||
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| + | You should care about Tristan Harris because he’s the only one explaining the invisible puppet strings without trying to sell you a mindfulness app afterward. He’s the guy translating why your phone feels addictive, why your feed feels like a psychological funhouse, and why the next wave of tech might not just distract us—it might take society’s training wheels off and shove it down a hill. | ||
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| + | **Tristan Harris | ||
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| + | Tristan Harris, born around 1984 in the San Francisco Bay Area, grew up fascinated by magic and illusions, which sparked his early insights into how perceptions can be manipulated. | ||
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| + | Tristan Harris didn’t start out as the cranky conscience of Silicon Valley. He began as one of its golden children—a Stanford‑trained designer studying human‑computer interaction under the very people who pioneered persuasive technology. Back then, the mission was noble: to build tools that help people. Make life easier. Make information accessible. You know, the brochure version of tech. | ||
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| + | Harris collaborated with future Instagram founders on early app prototypes and launched his first startup, Apture, in 2007—a search tool acquired by Google in 2011. | ||
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| + | Suddenly he was inside the machine, surrounded by engineers who treated human attention like a natural resource—something to extract, refine, and monetize. And that’s when Harris started noticing the cracks. The industry wasn’t building tools anymore; it was building habits, impulses, reflexes. Every notification, | ||
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| + | In 2013, he wrote a 141‑slide internal memo at Google—a polite but pointed “Hey, are we sure this isn’t ethically questionable? | ||
| + | His influence peaked with the 2020 Netflix documentary The Social Dilemma, where he starred as a whistleblower exposing how platforms like Facebook and YouTube hijack brains for profit, contributing to mental health crises and misinformation. | ||
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| + | Harris | ||
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| + | What makes Harris stand out isn’t doom‑saying, | ||
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| + | **Tristan Harris matters because he’s telling the story from the inside.** | ||
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| + | He's Silicon Valley' | ||
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| + | **Where Harris Is Now, and Where He’s Going** | ||
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| + | And now we arrive at the present, where Tristan Harris has leveled up from “guy warning us about social media” to “guy standing on the edge of the future waving a giant red flag while everyone else is busy asking AI to write breakup texts.” | ||
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| + | In his recent TED talk, Harris asks a deceptively simple question: What if the way we’re deploying the world’s most powerful technology—artificial intelligence—isn’t inevitable, but a choice? | ||
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| + | Not destiny. Not fate. Not “oops, the algorithm escaped.” A choice. As in: humans could steer this thing… if we actually tried. | ||
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| + | He argues that we’re replaying the exact same disaster movie we saw with social media—the catastrophic rollout, the “move fast and break everything” swagger, the total absence of guardrails—except now the stakes aren’t just your attention span. They’re your information ecosystem, your elections, your economy, and maybe the collective sanity of the species. You know, minor details. | ||
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| + | Harris calls this moment a “narrow path”—the slim middle ground between reckless acceleration and paranoid shutdown. A path where power is matched with responsibility, | ||
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| + | **So where is Tristan Harris now? | ||
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| + | Still doing what he’s always done: translating the invisible systems shaping our lives into plain English, pointing out the predictable disasters before they happen, and reminding us that technology doesn’t have to be a runaway train. It can be a tool—if we stop acting like passengers and start acting like the ones holding the controls. | ||
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| + | **And where is he going? | ||
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| + | Straight into the fight over how AI gets built, deployed, and governed. Because if social media was the warm‑up act, AI is the headliner, and Harris is trying to make sure the encore doesn’t burn the whole theater down. | ||
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| + | **So what did we actually learn here?** | ||
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| + | Not robots with lasers… just systems so powerful and so poorly supervised that they accidentally bulldoze the things we actually care about: truth, stability, sanity, democracy. You know , the boring stuff. | ||
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| + | Harris isn’t standing on a street corner with a “The End Is Near” sign. He’s more like the guy calmly pointing out that the bridge is missing a few bolts and maybe , just maybe, we should fix that before driving a super intelligent semi truck across it. | ||
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| + | He’s not predicting doom. He’s explaining the conditions that create doom if nobody bothers to look up from their phones. And honestly, he’s just hoping someone, anyone, is listening before we repeat the same “oops” that social media gave us, except this time with technology that doesn’t need a billion users to cause a billion problems. | ||
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| + | Because if AI is the next chapter of human progress, Harris is the one whispering, “Great… but maybe let’s not speed run the apocalypse while we’re at it.” | ||
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