『Taylor Lorenz’s Power User』のカバーアート

Taylor Lorenz’s Power User

Taylor Lorenz’s Power User

著者: Taylor Lorenz
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Taylor Lorenz explores how technology and the internet are upending our lives and the world around us. Each week, she explores everything from online fame to emerging platforms, viral phenomena, the creator economy, and much more. Tune in every Wednesday for regular episodes and every Friday for "Free Speech Friday," her series on tech policy and the fight for civil liberties online.Taylor Lorenz 政治・政府 経済学
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  • Kids Aren't Addicted to Phones — Here's the Data (The Top Academic Studying Social Media & Children Breaks Things Down)
    2026/07/10

    Is social media actually destroying a generation, or are we in the middle of a massive political moral panic?

    For this week's Free Speech Friday I sat down with one of the world's leading researchers studying young people, technology, and mental health to answer one question: Did social media really create a generation-wide mental health crisis?

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    Buy a paid subscription to my newsletter at usermag.co

    Support my work on Patreon: http://patreon.com/taylorlorenz

    For years we've been told that smartphones and social media are fueling anxiety, depression, loneliness, and suicide among teenagers. Politicians, bestselling authors, and news outlets have treated that idea as settled science.

    But what does the actual research say?

    Developmental psychologist Candice Odgers has spent decades studying how young people use technology. In this interview, we break down what the evidence actually shows, why many experts disagree with the popular narrative, and how the social media panic is influencing online safety laws, censorship, surveillance, age verification, and internet policy around the world.

    We discuss:

    • The real relationship between social media and teen mental health

    • Why correlation is often mistaken for causation

    • What studies actually find about screen time

    • The debate around The Anxious Generation

    • Why many scientists reject claims that phones are driving a mental health epidemic

    • Online safety laws and age verification

    • Privacy, surveillance, and internet censorship

    • What parents should actually focus on

    • The future of social media regulation


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    43 分
  • Why Smart Glasses Feel Different This Time w/ Amy Odell
    2026/07/08

    Are we living through the dawn of a permanent Surveillance Summer?

    SUPPORT MY WORK:

    Buy a paid subscription to my newsletter at usermag.co

    Support my work on Patreon: http://patreon.com/taylorlorenz

    Kylie Jenner is the new face of Meta's AI smart glasses and suddenly, mass surveillance is a fashion trend. Influencers are declaring a "hot surveillance summer," West Village fashion girlies are posting AI glasses selfies, and for thousands of people (not me! lol), cameras on your face have officially gone from creepy to chic. How did we get here?

    In this episode, I sit down with iconic fashion journalist Amy Odell, author of the Back Row newsletter covering fashion, culture, and power, to unpack how Big Tech used the fashion industry to normalize wearable surveillance. We trace the full history of smart glasses, from the Google Glass disaster and Snapchat Spectacles vending machines to Ray-Ban Stories, Oakley Meta glasses, and the rhinestone-studded AI glasses taking over your feed.

    We discuss why the Kylie AI glasses are a turning point for wearable tech, and how this could be the moment personalized AI surveillance becomes permanently woven into public life.

    Subscribe to Amy's newsletter here: https://www.backrow.net/

    We get into: ▸ Why Meta chose Kylie Jenner as the face of its AI glasses campaign ▸ How Mark Zuckerberg rehabbed his image through influencer interviews ▸ The "hot surveillance summer" discourse and why some women are embracing being recorded ▸ How fashion makes surveillance tech palatable — from GoPro to AI hair clips ▸ Meta's facial recognition plans, data harvesting, and what it means for privacy ▸ The Meta Gala, OpenAI's fashion world infiltration, and Snap's $2,000 AR flop ▸ How anti-phone and anti-screen sentiment is fueling the rise of ambient computing, AI pendants, pins, and camera-equipped AirPods

    ▸ Who actually owns the data Meta's AI glasses collect


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    43 分
  • Bars Are Secretly Scanning Your Face And Tracking You
    2026/07/03

    Most people hand their ID to a bouncer without thinking twice. But what if your local bar was monitoring way more than your age?

    SUPPORT MY WORK:

    Buy a paid subscription to my newsletter at usermag.co

    Support my work on Patreon: http://patreon.com/taylorlorenz

    Cydney Hayes is a tech and business reporter at the Gazetteer SF.and she joins me for this week's Free Speech Friday to discuss her investigation into Patronscan, a creepy biometric surveillance system being integrated into bars and restaurants across the country.

    We examine how these systems collect personal information, photograph and surveil patrons as they move from bar to bar, build databases, and raise serious questions about privacy, biometric tracking, facial recognition, and data collection.

    We discuss:

    • How PatronScan works

    • Why bars are adopting these systems

    • What information is collected

    • Privacy concerns surrounding biometric data

    • Facial recognition and surveillance technology

    • How customer databases are created

    • The legal controversies surrounding PatronScan

    • Why surveillance is expanding into everyday spaces

    • What this means for the future of privacy

    As surveillance technology spreads from airports and retail stores into restaurants, bars, and nightlife, it's becoming increasingly important to understand how these systems operate and what tradeoffs they create.


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    30 分
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