Erased: Silencing a kindergarten
Click Here12 Aug

Erased: Silencing a kindergarten

In a small classroom in western China, children once learned to sing and count in the language of their ancestors — Uyghur. Then the doors were locked, and founder Abduweli Ayup went from teacher to enemy of the state.

ERASED is a four-part investigation into how China is wiping Uyghur culture from existence — one law, one app, one person, one website at a time. From shuttered schools to vanishing websites, ERASED uncovers an authoritarian regime’s campaign to delete a culture — and the unlikely rebels racing to stop it.

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80. Meet ChatGPT’s evil twin

80. Meet ChatGPT’s evil twin

Wave “goodbye” to those pesky emails from Nigerian princes and say “hello” to the latest generation of AI enabled email scamming. It’s smarter, faster and, by the way, looks like it’s coming from your boss. The only thing that might stop them? AI itself. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

15 Aug 202323min

79. One woman’s Orwellian experience with disinformation

79. One woman’s Orwellian experience with disinformation

We look at an American disinformation campaign that makes clear online abuse directed at women goes far beyond a couple of mean tweets. And, an update on a Syrian activist who was on the receiving end of a misinformation crisis of her own. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

8 Aug 202325min

78. Trouble in the cloud

78. Trouble in the cloud

Putting your data in the cloud used to be seen as the gold standard of information security. Why have your small IT team protect your data when the experts at Microsoft or Google or AWS can do it instead? And then in May, Chinese hackers broke into the Microsoft cloud, exposing not just a flaw in the code, but a glitch in company’s business model as well. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

1 Aug 202318min

77. SPECIAL FEATURE: ‘The internet is at the bottom of the sea’ from Things That Go Boom

77. SPECIAL FEATURE: ‘The internet is at the bottom of the sea’ from Things That Go Boom

This week, we share an episode from PRX and Inkstick Media’s “Things that Go Boom” podcast about the thousands of miles of fiber optic cable lying at the bottom of the sea. Some 95 percent of the world’s electronic data is traveling through them and cables are taking centerstage in the high-stakes competition between the U.S. and China. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

25 Juli 202339min

76. The Mexican army’s love affair with spyware

76. The Mexican army’s love affair with spyware

Since our story on spyware in Mexico aired back in March, researchers have discovered a roster of Pegasus spyware infections on the phones of local journalists, activists, and even officials within the Mexican president’s inner circle. This week, we return to our deep dive on the use of spyware in Mexico and the revelation that the army created a secret military intelligence unit dedicated to its use. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

18 Juli 202324min

75. SPECIAL FEATURE: 'Life, death and AI' from Endless Thread

75. SPECIAL FEATURE: 'Life, death and AI' from Endless Thread

From WBUR's “Endless Thread" podcast, a story on a growing segment of artificial intelligence: immortalizing the dead through predictive AI text and how bots can help us understand grief. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

11 Juli 202334min

74. Reality Winner and the handling of secret documents

74. Reality Winner and the handling of secret documents

We revisit a sit-down interview we had with NSA contractor Reality Winner shortly after she spent 4 years in prison for passing a single classified document to a reporter. Given all the focus on classified documents and the way they’ve been handled in recent weeks, it seemed a good time to take another look at what happened to Reality. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

4 Juli 202322min

73. Can satellite surveillance save Sudan from itself?

73. Can satellite surveillance save Sudan from itself?

Two decades after Arab militias first torched villages and killed hundreds of thousands of people in West Darfur, violence has returned to the region. We tell the story of one group of researchers who use open source intelligence, algorithms and satellite imagery in a bid to quell the violence in Sudan. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices

27 Juni 202328min

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