How You Were Fooled

Technology Saves Time — Why We Feel Busier Than Ever

8 min · 10 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio Technology Saves Time — Why We Feel Busier Than Ever

Descripción

This episode explores the paradox that although technology has made tasks faster and more efficient, people often feel busier and more overwhelmed than ever. Instead of creating free time, technological efficiency increased expectations, communication speed, and workload. The episode explains the efficiency paradox: when systems become faster, society responds by increasing activity rather than reducing effort. Instant communication created pressure for instant responses, remote work removed boundaries between work and rest, and smartphones filled previously empty moments with constant input and tasks. Technology also created endless streams of information, notifications, and choices, leading to mental fatigue, decision overload, and a constant feeling of incompletion. While technology improves convenience and productivity, it often replaces saved time with new demands and expectations. The key insight is that technology does not automatically create freedom. It removes friction, but without boundaries, the saved time becomes filled with even more activity.

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de How You Were Fooled!

Prueba gratis

Empieza 7 días de prueba

$99 / mes después de la prueba. · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts solo en Podimo
  • 20 horas de audiolibros al mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

49 episodios

episode Data Knows You Better Than You — Prediction vs Understanding artwork

Data Knows You Better Than You — Prediction vs Understanding

This episode examines the claim that data and algorithms know people better than they know themselves. Modern systems collect enormous amounts of behavioral data — clicks, searches, purchases, viewing habits, and online activity — allowing them to predict future actions with remarkable accuracy. However, the episode explains that prediction is not the same as understanding. Algorithms do not truly know a person's thoughts, emotions, motivations, or life experiences. Instead, they identify patterns and probabilities based on past behavior. Because humans are often poor at explaining their own decisions, data can sometimes predict actions more accurately than self-reflection, creating the illusion of deep understanding. The episode also explores how digital platforms use prediction not only to anticipate behavior but to influence it through recommendations, personalized content, and targeted advertising. Over time, prediction and influence can merge, making algorithms appear even more insightful. The key insight is that data may know your habits better than you do, but it does not know your inner life. Algorithms understand patterns, not meaning; behavior, not consciousness. Predicting what someone will do is fundamentally different from understanding who they are.

30 de may de 20269 min
episode AI Is Objective — Bias in Machines artwork

AI Is Objective — Bias in Machines

This episode challenges the belief that artificial intelligence is naturally objective or unbiased. While AI appears logical and mathematical, it is trained on human-created data, which often contains historical inequalities, assumptions, and social biases. AI systems learn patterns from existing information rather than understanding morality or fairness. As a result, biased hiring practices, unequal policing data, or unbalanced datasets can lead algorithms to reproduce and even amplify unfair outcomes. Because these decisions come from machines, people often trust them more easily — a tendency known as automation bias. The episode also explores problems such as opaque “black box” systems, feedback loops that reinforce inequality, and the misconception that removing humans automatically removes bias. In reality, humans still define the goals, metrics, and data that AI uses. The key insight is that AI is not neutral simply because it is technological. Algorithms reflect the structures, incentives, and biases of the societies that build them, and their decisions should be questioned rather than automatically trusted.

24 de may de 20268 min
episode Social Media Connects People — The Loneliness Paradox artwork

Social Media Connects People — The Loneliness Paradox

This episode explores the paradox that although social media has made people more connected digitally than ever before, many still experience increasing loneliness. Social media successfully removed distance and increased communication, but connection quantity is not the same as emotional closeness. The episode explains how humans evolved for deep, face-to-face relationships involving presence, attention, and emotional safety — elements often missing in online interaction. Social media creates constant awareness of others but can also increase comparison, insecurity, and feelings of exclusion through curated lifestyles and visible social activity. It also highlights how likes, followers, and online attention can create the illusion of belonging while lacking genuine intimacy. Platforms optimize for engagement and visibility, not emotional depth, leading to many shallow interactions instead of meaningful relationships. The key insight is that humans do not simply need communication — they need authentic connection, presence, and understanding. Social media connects networks, but it does not automatically fulfill emotional needs.

17 de may de 20268 min
episode Technology Saves Time — Why We Feel Busier Than Ever artwork

Technology Saves Time — Why We Feel Busier Than Ever

This episode explores the paradox that although technology has made tasks faster and more efficient, people often feel busier and more overwhelmed than ever. Instead of creating free time, technological efficiency increased expectations, communication speed, and workload. The episode explains the efficiency paradox: when systems become faster, society responds by increasing activity rather than reducing effort. Instant communication created pressure for instant responses, remote work removed boundaries between work and rest, and smartphones filled previously empty moments with constant input and tasks. Technology also created endless streams of information, notifications, and choices, leading to mental fatigue, decision overload, and a constant feeling of incompletion. While technology improves convenience and productivity, it often replaces saved time with new demands and expectations. The key insight is that technology does not automatically create freedom. It removes friction, but without boundaries, the saved time becomes filled with even more activity.

10 de may de 20268 min
episode Cancel Culture Is New — It Existed for Centuries artwork

Cancel Culture Is New — It Existed for Centuries

This episode challenges the idea that cancel culture is a modern phenomenon. In reality, social punishment, exclusion, and reputation damage have existed for centuries in forms like ostracism, public shaming, and exile. What has changed is not the behavior itself, but its scale, speed, and permanence in the digital age. Social media amplifies reactions instantly, allowing large groups to respond at once, often without full context. This creates mob dynamics, where collective reactions become more intense than individual intentions. Additionally, the internet makes consequences more lasting, as past actions remain permanently accessible. The episode highlights that cancel culture is rooted in human social behavior — enforcing norms and accountability — but can become problematic when driven by rapid, emotional reactions rather than thoughtful judgment. The key insight is that cancel culture is not new, but a long-standing human behavior amplified by modern technology.

4 de may de 20267 min