Ruined By The Internet? | Uncovering the human cost of our digital world

Job Security: Optimised for Our Own Obsolescence?

44 min · Ayer
Portada del episodio Job Security: Optimised for Our Own Obsolescence?

Descripción

The internet promised to make us more productive, more employable, and more economically secure. But as AI begins replacing not just tasks but entire professional roles - including ones that took many years to reach - is technology making job security itself an obsolete concept? We're joined by Nick Jain, a Harvard-trained former private equity investor, and co-founder of Eagle Rock CFO, who builds systems to replace the leadership that used to require a senior executive, giving him a front row seat to a transformation that's rapidly coming for every industry, whether they're ready or not. And he's under no illusions about what that could mean for the rest of us. Welcome to Ruined By The Internet? - the show where we examine how technology is shaping modern life - whether we want it to or not. Follow or subscribe to never miss the next investigation - new episodes regularly. Visit us: https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/ [https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/] Help us investigate ourselves: https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/survey/ [https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/survey/] Support the show: https://buymeacoffee.com/rbtishow [https://buymeacoffee.com/rbtishow] In this episode we investigate how AI is displacing not just entry-level roles but senior professional positions that people spent careers building toward, examine the J curve of productivity, and why the short-term pain of technology adoption is being distributed so unevenly. We also explore the gap between AI's actual capabilities and the hype being sold to businesses and workers, and ask whether Universal Basic Income is a genuine safety net for what's coming - or a way of making worker displacement politically acceptable. 00:00 - The gap between what technology promised and what it's actually delivering 03:09 - The J curve of productivity: why things get worse before they get better 05:57 - AI and job displacement: which roles are most exposed and why 08:52 - Optimism versus pessimism about the future of work: what the evidence actually supports 12:03 - The role of creativity in surviving an AI-driven workforce 14:51 - Where the real opportunities for growth are, and which industries face the hardest road 18:10 - Hollywood as a case study in what AI disruption looks like in practice 21:01 - AI washing: separating genuine capability from marketing noise 23:06 - What AI can actually do in the workforce right now versus what we're told it can do 30:11 - The human cost of job displacement beyond the economic argument 37:24 - Universal Basic Income as a response to automation: solution or sticking plaster? 42:12 - What the future of work looks like as AI capabilities continue to evolve Guest links – Nick Jain Website: https://www.eaglerockcfo.com/ [https://www.eaglerockcfo.com/]

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30 episodios

episode Job Security: Optimised for Our Own Obsolescence? artwork

Job Security: Optimised for Our Own Obsolescence?

The internet promised to make us more productive, more employable, and more economically secure. But as AI begins replacing not just tasks but entire professional roles - including ones that took many years to reach - is technology making job security itself an obsolete concept? We're joined by Nick Jain, a Harvard-trained former private equity investor, and co-founder of Eagle Rock CFO, who builds systems to replace the leadership that used to require a senior executive, giving him a front row seat to a transformation that's rapidly coming for every industry, whether they're ready or not. And he's under no illusions about what that could mean for the rest of us. Welcome to Ruined By The Internet? - the show where we examine how technology is shaping modern life - whether we want it to or not. Follow or subscribe to never miss the next investigation - new episodes regularly. Visit us: https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/ [https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/] Help us investigate ourselves: https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/survey/ [https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/survey/] Support the show: https://buymeacoffee.com/rbtishow [https://buymeacoffee.com/rbtishow] In this episode we investigate how AI is displacing not just entry-level roles but senior professional positions that people spent careers building toward, examine the J curve of productivity, and why the short-term pain of technology adoption is being distributed so unevenly. We also explore the gap between AI's actual capabilities and the hype being sold to businesses and workers, and ask whether Universal Basic Income is a genuine safety net for what's coming - or a way of making worker displacement politically acceptable. 00:00 - The gap between what technology promised and what it's actually delivering 03:09 - The J curve of productivity: why things get worse before they get better 05:57 - AI and job displacement: which roles are most exposed and why 08:52 - Optimism versus pessimism about the future of work: what the evidence actually supports 12:03 - The role of creativity in surviving an AI-driven workforce 14:51 - Where the real opportunities for growth are, and which industries face the hardest road 18:10 - Hollywood as a case study in what AI disruption looks like in practice 21:01 - AI washing: separating genuine capability from marketing noise 23:06 - What AI can actually do in the workforce right now versus what we're told it can do 30:11 - The human cost of job displacement beyond the economic argument 37:24 - Universal Basic Income as a response to automation: solution or sticking plaster? 42:12 - What the future of work looks like as AI capabilities continue to evolve Guest links – Nick Jain Website: https://www.eaglerockcfo.com/ [https://www.eaglerockcfo.com/]

Ayer44 min
episode Retail: Convenience That Costs Everything? artwork

Retail: Convenience That Costs Everything?

The internet promised to bring the world's stores directly to us. But in chasing convenience over everything, has it killed the high street, gutted retailers, and replaced the experience of shopping with a transaction? We're joined by Joe Zahaitis, a payments industry strategist with over 30 years experience in the high-velocity digital marketplace - giving him an insider's view of what happens when we trade a sensory, social experience for an impersonal digital one that leaves most retailers in a tech-driven race to the bottom. Welcome to Ruined By The Internet? - the show where we examine how technology is shaping modern life - whether we want it to or not. Follow or subscribe to never miss the next investigation - new episodes regularly. Visit us: https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/ [https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/] Help us investigate ourselves: https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/survey/ [https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/survey/] Support the show: https://buymeacoffee.com/rbtishow [https://buymeacoffee.com/rbtishow] In this episode we investigate how e-commerce dismantled the high street and the community spaces built around it, examine the psychological effects of instant gratification and what it's done to our relationship with shopping, explore the trust and transparency challenges of buying in a world you can't touch or see, and ask whether AI and personalisation can ever replace what’s been lost. 00:00 - The transformation of retail in the digital age 03:02 - How e-commerce reshaped society beyond just shopping 06:08 - The rise of instant gratification and what it costs us 08:49 - Customer service in the digital age: better or worse? 12:07 - The future of local retail: survival or slow death? 14:46 - Trust and transparency in online shopping 18:04 - The role of AI in shaping consumer experiences 21:01 - The psychological effects of online shopping on behaviour and identity 23:52 - Digital payments and the friction they remove - and create 26:54 - Where online retail goes from here - and what gets left behind Guest links – Joe Zahaitis Website: https://www.zahaitis.com [https://www.zahaitis.com] LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/joezahaitis/ [https://www.linkedin.com/in/joezahaitis/]

20 de may de 202638 min
episode Sleep: Screens Stealing Our Slumber? artwork

Sleep: Screens Stealing Our Slumber?

The internet promised us connection that never sleeps. But has it also been sabotaging our rest - leaving us locked in a nightly battle with a digital world that refuses to turn off? We're joined by Chelsea Reynolds - sleep researcher and clinical psychologist - who is exactly the right person to ask about what happens when bedtime becomes screen time, and whether our screens are the problem, or the solution. Welcome to Ruined By The Internet? - the show where we examine how technology is shaping modern life - whether we want it to or not. Follow or subscribe to never miss the next investigation - new episodes regularly. Visit us: https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/ [https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/] Help us investigate ourselves: https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/survey/ [https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/survey/] Support the show: https://buymeacoffee.com/rbtishow [https://buymeacoffee.com/rbtishow] In this episode we investigate how screens and digital habits are disrupting our sleep biology, examine the sleep displacement hypothesis and what it actually means for how we rest, explore the psychology behind why we choose screens over sleep even when we know better, and ask whether the same technology keeping us awake could ever genuinely help us sleep. 00:00 - The internet's impact on sleep and why it matters 04:59 - Sleep biology and exactly where technology interferes 09:57 - The sleep displacement hypothesis: are screens stealing our hours or just our quality? 15:00 - Navigating sleep aids in a world full of digital solutions 20:01 - How the blurring of work and personal life is destroying sleep boundaries 25:04 - The bright light hypothesis and how screen wavelengths affect sleep patterns 25:09 - Understanding sleep routines and where technology fits in 30:36 - Teenagers, sleep needs, and the specific risks of digital exposure 33:00 - The risk factors most people don't know are affecting their sleep 35:30 - How to transform technology from sleep disruptor into sleep aid 37:23 - Practical sleep strategies for a screen-saturated world 39:44 - The nuance of technology's role in sleep: it's not all bad Guest links - Chelsea Reynolds Website: https://www.bedtimewindow.com/ [https://www.bedtimewindow.com/] LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/chelsea-reynolds-29b43191/ [https://www.linkedin.com/in/chelsea-reynolds-29b43191/]

6 de may de 202642 min
episode Empowerment: Objectification Rebranded as Agency? artwork

Empowerment: Objectification Rebranded as Agency?

When it comes to empowering ourselves, we were told the internet would give us back control. But instead, has it simply delivered a more efficient way for us to become products, and successfully rebranded objectification as agency? We’re joined by Courtney Kocak - writer, comedian, and author of the memoir Girl Gone Wild - to investigate one of the most uncomfortable questions about what technology has done to identity, autonomy, power, and the people caught in between. Welcome to Ruined By The Internet? - the show where we examine how technology is shaping modern life - whether we want it to or not. Follow or subscribe to never miss the next investigation - new episodes regularly. Visit us: https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/ [https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/] Help us investigate ourselves: https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/survey/ [https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/survey/] Support the show: https://buymeacoffee.com/rbtishow [https://buymeacoffee.com/rbtishow] In this episode we trace the journey from early 2000s media to today's self-monetisation platforms, examine how the attention economy and algorithms have reshaped desire and self-perception, investigate the rise of online male communities and their generational impact, and ask whether AI is accelerating the problem - or simply making it harder to see. 00:00 - The Internet's impact on empowerment and objectification 03:10 - From early 2000s media to today's self-monetization platforms 07:50 - The evolution of pop culture and its increasingly explicit direction 09:12 - Tracing the cultural roots of today's online extremity 13:28 - The influence of the attention economy 14:37 - The rise of the manosphere and its impact 16:29 - The generational difference: navigating online life and authenticity 20:13 - Shifting attitudes toward sex work and societal acceptance 23:29 - The influence of explicit online content 25:34 - How online validation shapes our self-perception 27:13 - Authenticity and the rejection of algorithm-driven content 30:18 - The potential and pitfalls of AI in digital content and society 34:47 - The impact of AI-generated actors and content on creative industries 36:57 - The slow political response to AI and digital regulation 38:15 - The importance of nuanced conversations 39:41 - Concerns about technology's societal effects Guest links — Courtney Kocak Website: https://www.courtneykocak.com/ [https://www.courtneykocak.com/] Podcast: https://www.privatepartsunknown.com/ [https://www.privatepartsunknown.com/] Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/courtneykocak/ [https://www.instagram.com/courtneykocak/] TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@courtneykocak [https://www.tiktok.com/@courtneykocak]

26 de abr de 202643 min
episode Rental Markets: A Frantic Fight for Shelter as a Service? artwork

Rental Markets: A Frantic Fight for Shelter as a Service?

The internet was supposed to make the rental market more efficient and transparent. But has it instead turned the basic human need for shelter into a frantic, dehumanising battle with technology - where algorithms, platforms, and data have more power than the people looking for a home? We're joined by Thomas Sigler - Deputy Head of the School of the Environment and Associate Professor of Human Geography at the University of Queensland - whose research sits at the exact intersection of urban geography, technology, and how we live. Welcome to Ruined By The Internet? - the show where we examine how technology is shaping modern life - whether we want it to or not. Follow or subscribe to never miss the next investigation - new episodes regularly. Visit us: https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/ [https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/] Help us investigate ourselves: https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/survey/ [https://www.ruinedbytheinternet.com/survey/] Support the show: https://buymeacoffee.com/rbtishow [https://buymeacoffee.com/rbtishow] In this episode we investigate how short-term rental platforms hollowed out housing supply, examine the role of PropTech in reshaping how we search and apply for homes, explore the data privacy implications of digital rental applications, and ask whether the technology that promised transparency has simply handed more power to landlords, platforms, and property influencers. 00:00 Introduction to the Rental Market Crisis 02:57 The Impact of Short-Term Rentals 06:04 Understanding the Rental Market Dynamics 08:47 The Role of PropTech in Rental Searches 11:55 Community Resistance and Transient Populations 15:02 The Rise of Digital Nomadism 17:51 The Transparency of Digital Platforms 21:07 Privacy Concerns in Rental Applications 24:09 Regulatory Challenges in the Rental Market 26:45 The Influence of Property Influencers 29:56 FOMO and the Property Market 33:10 Crisis in the Housing Market 36:05 The Future of Housing and Technology 38:59 What renters can actually do Guest links — Thomas Sigler: https://environment.uq.edu.au/profile/9602/thomas-sigler [https://environment.uq.edu.au/profile/9602/thomas-sigler]

13 de abr de 202645 min