The Eavesdropper Economy: How Surveillance Built AI (E186)
El Podcast18 Feb

The Eavesdropper Economy: How Surveillance Built AI (E186)

A lively tour from Cold War “The Thing” to today’s surveillance capitalism—showing how audio capture, too much data, and automation pressures helped turn listening into AI.

Guest bios:
  • Dr. Toby Heys — Professor at the School of Digital Arts (SODA), Manchester Metropolitan University; co-founder of the AUDINT sonic research unit; co-author of Listening In
  • Dr. David Jackson — Senior Lecturer in Digital Visualisation at SODA, Manchester Metropolitan University; researches AI’s cultural impact; founded the Storytellers + Machines conference (2023); co-author of Listening In.
  • Marsha Courneya — Canadian writer/editor; teaches Digital Dramaturgy at the International Film School of Cologne; doctoral researcher in Digital Culture and Communication at Birkbeck, University of London; co-author of Listening In.
Topics discussed:
  • “The Thing” (1945): passive bugging, resonance, why it went undetected
  • Cold War escalation: normalization of listening, Five Eyes, PRISM/Snowden
  • Stasi data glut: informants, dossiers, “collecting as mania,” behavior change
  • Language under surveillance: cryptolects, slang, coded speech, hip-hop as evasion
  • Surveillance capitalism: smart homes, smart toys, wearables, “data promiscuity”
  • Kids + data: baby monitors/crib cams, school biometrics, “data twins” before birth
  • AI training + intimate life: accidental recordings, human review, terms-of-service reality
  • Future tensions: convenience vs autonomy, regulation lag, ownership erosion (“enshittification”)
Main points:
  • Audio surveillance scales into an “automation problem.” Once you can record everything, the bottleneck becomes listening fast enough, pushing intelligence services toward automated analysis.
  • Surveillance changes behavior—even when nobody is actively listening. The possibility of being overheard bends speech, jokes, and self-presentation (Stasi dynamics → modern smart devices).
  • “Too much data” doesn’t make it harmless. The danger isn’t only what’s heard today, but the creation of a searchable “permanent record” that can be reinterpreted later.
  • The home becomes the most valuable capture zone. People drop the public mask at home; that intimacy makes in-home audio uniquely revealing and therefore lucrative/powerful.
  • Children are captured early—often via “safety” and parental anxiety. Baby tech, smart toys, school systems, and medical records create a data trail before kids can consent or understand it.
  • Snowden shocked—but didn’t trigger lasting mass refusal. The episode argues leaks often lead to resignation/memeification (“the intel officer listening”) rather than sustained backlash.
  • AI + ownership is the next front. Beyond privacy, the guests worry about erosion of ownership (you can’t fully “own” digital goods or refuse totalizing platforms as easily).
Top 3 quotes:
  • Toby:There was nothing to detect.
  • Marsha:It ruptures language completely.
  • David:data isn’t secure and safe.

🎙 The Pod is hosted by Jesse Wright
💬 For guest suggestions, questions, or media inquiries, reach out at https://elpodcast.media/
📬 Never miss an episode – subscribe and follow wherever you get your podcasts.
⭐️ If you enjoyed this episode, please rate and review the show. It helps others find us.

Thanks for listening!

Episoder(189)

E173: Broke. Woke. Stroke. A tenured prof explains why college is failing

E173: Broke. Woke. Stroke. A tenured prof explains why college is failing

Tenured sociology professor Mark Horowitz explains why falling preparedness, grade inflation, and perverse incentives are eroding college standards—and why “broke, woke, stroke” helps describe the pat...

17 Des 20251h 7min

E172: MMT Is Going Mainstream - Right as the AI Bubble Is About to Pop: Explained by Dr. Maggiori

E172: MMT Is Going Mainstream - Right as the AI Bubble Is About to Pop: Explained by Dr. Maggiori

A wide-ranging conversation with economist and AI consultant Dr. Emmanuel Maggiori on why Modern Monetary Theory overpromises a “free lunch,” what really causes inflation, how Bitcoin and AI are misun...

9 Des 20251h 44min

E171: How the Internet Got Tamed: James Corbett on Media & Power

E171: How the Internet Got Tamed: James Corbett on Media & Power

Independent journalist James Corbett joins Jesse to trace how media, tech, and elite power have reshaped the information landscape—from Time’s 2006 “You” to today’s post-truth, AI-saturated world.GUES...

6 Des 202558min

E170: Boomers Didn’t Steal Your Future. This Did - Dr. Jennie Bristow

E170: Boomers Didn’t Steal Your Future. This Did - Dr. Jennie Bristow

Sociologist Dr. Jennie Bristow joins Jesse to dismantle “generation wars” rhetoric—especially Boomer-blaming—and re-center the real story: stalled economies, broken higher ed, housing dysfunction, and...

3 Des 20251h 10min

E169: Why Diets Fail: The Hidden Forces Controlling What You Eat - Julia Belluz

E169: Why Diets Fail: The Hidden Forces Controlling What You Eat - Julia Belluz

Investigative health journalist Julia Belluz breaks down what really drives obesity and chronic disease—metabolism myths, ultra-processed food, bad incentives, and why our entire food environment is q...

27 Nov 202544min

E168: AI - Biggest Bubble in Human History? Tech Economist Says YES

E168: AI - Biggest Bubble in Human History? Tech Economist Says YES

Tech economist Dr. Jeffrey Funk argues that today’s AI boom is the biggest bubble in history—far larger than dot-com or housing—because colossal infrastructure spending is chasing tiny, unprofitable r...

20 Nov 20251h 39min

E167: Nuclear Rockets, AI Agents & Science Hype | RealClear Science’s Ross Pomeroy

E167: Nuclear Rockets, AI Agents & Science Hype | RealClear Science’s Ross Pomeroy

Steven Ross Pomeroy, Chief Editor of RealClearScience, joins the podcast to discuss NASA’s abandoned nuclear propulsion programs, the future of AI and white-collar work, the rise of “scienceploitation...

13 Nov 202539min

E166: Is the Internet Too Big to Moderate? — John Wihbey

E166: Is the Internet Too Big to Moderate? — John Wihbey

A wide-ranging conversation with Northeastern’s John Wihbey on how algorithms, laws, and business models shape speech online—and what smarter, lighter regulation could look like.Guest bio: John Wihbey...

6 Nov 20251h 33min

Populært innen Business og økonomi

stopp-verden
lydartikler-fra-aftenposten
dine-penger-pengeradet
rss-penger-polser-og-politikk
e24-podden
rss-borsmorgen-okonominyhetene
livet-pa-veien-med-jan-erik-larssen
tid-er-penger-en-podcast-med-peter-warren
pengesnakk
finansredaksjonen
utbytte
pengepodden-2
rss-sunn-okonomi
morgenkaffen-med-finansavisen
lederpodden
stormkast-med-valebrokk-stordalen
liberal-halvtime
rss-markedspuls-2
lederskap-nhhs-podkast-om-ledelse
arcticpodden