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MIT Technology Review Narrated

Welcome to MIT Technology Review Narrated, the home for the very best of our journalism in audio. Ea

Episodes

Total: 102

Synthetic voice technologies are increasingly passing as human. But today’s voice assistants are sti

Tech giants are moving into our wallets—bringing AI and big questions with them.Our entire financial

Computers are ranking the way people look—and the results are influencing the things we do, the post

Host Jennifer Strong and MIT Technology Review’s editors explore what it means to entrust AI with ou

Cameras in stores aren’t anything new—but these days there are AI brains behind the electric eyes. I

Two weeks after her forced exit, the AI ethics researcher reflects on her time at Google, how to inc

Face mapping and other tracking systems are changing the sports experience in the stands and on the

Facial recognition technology is being deployed in housing projects, homeless shelters, schools, eve

Moves have been made to restrict the use of facial recognition across the globe. In part one of this

The use of facial recognition by police has come under a lot of scrutiny. In part three of our four-

In the second of two exclusive interviews, Technology Review’s Editor-in-Chief Gideon Lichfield sat

Misinformation and social media have become inseparable from one another; as platforms like Twitter

Defining what is, or isn’t artificial intelligence can be tricky (or tough). So much so, even the ex

AI can read your emotional response to advertising and your facial expressions in a job interview. B

Researchers have spent years trying to crack the mystery of how we express our feelings. Pioneers in

Automated driving is advancing all the time, but there’s still a critical missing ingredient: trust.

What weird bugs did you pick up last time you rode a subway train? A global network of scientists ma

What happens when an algorithm gets it wrong? In the first of a four-part series on face recognition

Clearview AI has built one of the most comprehensive databases of people’s faces in the world. Your

The use of facial recognition by police has come under a lot of scrutiny. In part-three of our serie