The Human Protocol
In this episode of The Human Protocol, host Mykel Salomon sits down with James Robson, former data protection officer for the UK Labour Party, Founder & CEO of Datus Longevitus, to challenge the idea that data protection is a barrier to progress. Drawing on a decade of GDPR work, James argues that governance is what actually enables innovation, comparing data safeguards to the brakes on a car that let you drive faster, not slower. The conversation moves from the differences between US and European approaches to privacy, to practical ways individuals can protect themselves online, to inspiring real-world examples of data used for public good, including a King's College London study on cash grants for people experiencing homelessness. James and Mykel also confront the darker side of the AI era, from echo chambers and self-radicalization to addictive algorithms and the erosion of critical thinking, before landing on a hopeful vision of trusted data intermediaries and an ethical, transparent future where trust becomes the real infrastructure. In this episode you'll learn * Why compliance and data protection can be the condition for innovation rather than its enemy, using the brakes-on-a-car analogy * How storytelling skills translate into understanding data systems and getting people excited about ethical data use * The key philosophical difference between US data law (consumer focused) and European GDPR (human rights focused) * Practical steps individuals can take to protect their data, including ad blockers, password managers, and rejecting cookies and trackers * What rights GDPR gives you to request your data, and how that compares to the US patchwork like the CCPA in California * How connecting datasets responsibly can improve outcomes in social care, education, problem gambling, and homelessness prevention * The technical safeguards that make data sharing safe, including end-to-end encryption, immutable ledgers, and the UK's Five Safes framework * Why echo chambers can quietly radicalize people and how dependence on AI threatens independent and critical thinking * The link between addictive algorithms, screen time, and mental health, including recent rulings against Meta and Google * What a trustworthy data future could look like, from trusted data intermediaries to ethical trust scores and nutrition-label-style transparency * Concrete advice for individuals, AI leaders, and governments navigating data responsibility and AI regulation Connect with James Robson LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/-james-robson/ [https://www.linkedin.com/in/-james-robson/] Connect with Mykel Salomon LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mykelsalomon/ [https://www.linkedin.com/in/mykelsalomon/] Website: https://thehumanprotocolgroup.com/ [https://thehumanprotocolgroup.com/]
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