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Andrew Keen

Broadcaster & writer

Andrew Keen is a British-American entrepreneur, author, and commentator known for his critical views on Internet culture and technology's impact on society. Born around 1960 in Hampstead, North London, he has a background in history and political science, having studied at the University of London and the University of California, Berkeley. Keen has taught at several universities, including Tufts and Northeastern University, before returning to Silicon Valley in 1995 to start his first company, Audiocafe.com.1

Keen is particularly recognized for his book The Cult of the Amateur, which critiques user-generated content platforms like Wikipedia and YouTube, arguing that they undermine professional expertise and cultural quality. He has also authored Digital Vertigo and The Internet Is Not the Answer, where he discusses the negative aspects of social media and digital culture.12 He currently hosts the "Keen On" show, a platform for discussing technology and its societal implications.1

On LinkedIn, Keen shares insights related to technology, artificial intelligence, and societal issues, with a growing following of over 6,000 connections.2 His work often emphasizes the need for critical engagement with technology and its effects on human behavior and culture.23

Highlights

Apr 29 · twitter

The Deadliest of Plagues?, by @ajkeen https://t.co/qmALAwnbwg

@GarySlutkin1

“Violence has been misdiagnosed. And there’s a misdiagnosis that has caused us to not be able to control it as we could.” — Dr. Gary Slutkin

Human violence appears ubiquitous. In Iran. In Gaza. In Ukraine. In Sudan. In American cities and homes. So widespread, indeed, that it seems naturally hardwired into us. Our species-being, so to speak.

But, for Dr. Gary Slutkin, there is nothing inevitable about human violence. Slutkin — an epidemiologist who spent years fighting cholera, tuberculosis, and AIDS in Africa before focusing his medical mind on violence — argues that violence is neither a character flaw nor a moral failing. Rather than being baked into our natures, Slutkin sees violence as a contagious disease. It meets the clinical definition of a plague, he says. The more violent our homes, communities, media, politics, the more virally it spreads.

Slutkin’s new book, The End of Violence: Eliminating the World’s Most Dangerous Epidemic, makes the case that violence has been misdiagnosed for centuries. We analyse it as a crime problem, a character problem, an inter-state problem. So we punish, incarcerate and bomb. But none of these approaches confront the contagion. This can only be done, Slutkin argues, with what he calls “violence interrupters” — people from within the infected community who find the most at-risk individuals and cool things down before they escalate. Communities that have applied this approach have seen reductions in violence of 40 to 70 percent, Slutkin boasts, with Cherry Hill, one of Chicago’s most dangerous neighbourhoods, experiencing 450 days without a shooting.

There will be a time, he promises, when the plague of human violence will be mostly overcome. I hope Dr. Slutkin is correct. But suspect that his brave new violence-free world, like Huxley’s, might be simultaneously utopian and dystopian.

Jan 9 · twitter

Old School Principles for the New Century: What if the Right isn't Wrong about Education?, by @ajkeen https://t.co/hVe4PtzlPQ

What if the right isn’t wrong - or, at least, totally wrong, about education? That seems to be the conclusion of James Traub, a liberal educationalist, who has spent the last year visiting the civics programs of American high schools. Neither the 1619 Project nor Trump’s 1776 Report seems to be the message of Traub’s account of these travels, The Cradle of Citizenship. Schools can help save our democracy, Traub concludes, by equipping American students to think their way through the complexities of their nation’s history. The point of a good education, he concludes, is to foster thinking rather than moral outrage or virtue seeking. More Homer in the classroom, and less social media. Those are James Traub’s old school principles for our new century.

Dec 22 · Yahoo Finance
How COP28 is shaping the energy transition - Yahoo Finance
How COP28 is shaping the energy transition - Yahoo Finance
Aug 17 · Business Live
Losses rocket at ITM Power but hydrogen tech provider insists it better placed - Business Live
Losses rocket at ITM Power but hydrogen tech provider insists it better placed - Business Live
Jan 5 · listennotes.com
Leonard Mlodinow on the Science of Feelings - Keen On (podcast)

Related Questions

What are Andrew Keen's main criticisms of the Internet?
How did Andrew Keen's book "The Cult of the Amateur" impact his career?
What is the "Keen On" show about?
How does Andrew Keen view anonymity on the Internet?
What are some of the key themes in Andrew Keen's book "Digital Vertigo"?
Andrew Keen
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Location

San Francisco, California, United States