Skip to main content

FCC Chairman warns that technology can be perverted for evil

fcc-chairman-julius-genachowski-portraitThere is no doubt that governments, corporations, groups, and individuals use the power of technology for good and evil. Speaking at the United States Holocaust Memorial Council, FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski connected the hardships of those who endured Nazi oppression in Europe during and before World War II to any person alive today. Much like how the Nazis used the latest technology to further their horrible goals, technology can be perverted for evil today. 

“The Holocaust proves many sad truths,” Genachowski said, as reported by eWeek. “One is that modernity is not an inoculation against genocide. The pillars of modernity—technology and science—are powerful forces. They were perverted for evil by the Nazis, but technology and science are also sources of unlimited hope, opportunity and transformative change. We must fight so that technology is used to shine a light on oppression and intolerance, to illuminate persecution and dehumanization, to take oppression and mass murder out of the shadows.”

Recommended Videos

This all comes less than a week after the scandal over Carrier IQ broke, revealing that wireless carriers and smartphone manufacturers could be logging and collecting every key stroke on a phone–an epic and scary violation of privacy, should it be true. It is only the latest in waves of known and unknown evil uses of technology. The more technology powers and connects our world, the more responsibility we all have to prevent it from being perverted for evil purposes. The challenge lies in figuring out what is evil, or will lead to evil in an increasingly complex world. Everyone has their hands in the technology honeypot, making it harder to figure out who committed the crime.

What do you think? Are we mostly using technology for good or are we on a dark path toward the apocalypse?

Jeffrey Van Camp
Former Digital Trends Contributor
As DT's Deputy Editor, Jeff helps oversee editorial operations at Digital Trends. Previously, he ran the site's…
On my son’s behalf, I sought out the smart glasses that ‘give sight to the blind’
A prototype of the Soliddd Vision smart glasses.

Like many 4-year-olds, there's nothing my son loves more than cars. Despite my own complete lack of interest in the topic, he can already identify make and model of cars from across the street with uncanny accuracy, spurred on by his growing collection of Matchbox and Hot Wheels.

But as we've had to explain to him, we still don't know if he'll be ever to drive one himself. The brain tumor that he was born with left him with stunted vision, particularly in one eye, with little hope of improvement.

Read more
The RTX 5060 will be Nvidia’s most important GPU, and I’m worried about it
Two graphics cards sitting on top of each other.

Nvidia just finished revealing its range of new RTX 50-series GPUs, the first of which will arrive in just a couple of weeks. They're some of the best graphics cards ever made, according to Nvidia, and for the flagship RTX 5090 that clocks in at $2,000, I believe the company. Lower down the stack, however, I'm concerned.

For the past couple of years, there's been a growing issue surrounding graphics cards with 8GB of VRAM, which is something we've seen on full display with games like Indiana Jones and the Great Circle. Despite backlash in the previous generation concerning releases like the RTX 4060 Ti, I'm worried that Nvidia will repeat the mistakes of the past when the RTX 5060 inevitably rolls around.
It'll be popular

Read more
ChatGPT just dipped its toes into the world of AI agents
OpenAI's ChatGPT blog post is open on a computer monitor, taken from a high angle.

OpenAI appears to be just throwing spaghetti at this point, hoping it sticks to a profitable idea. The company announced on Tuesday that it is rolling out a new feature called ChatGPT Tasks to subscribers of its paid tier that will allow users to set individual and recurring reminders through the ChatGPT interface.

Tasks does exactly what it sounds like it does: It allows you to ask ChatGPT to do a specific action at some point in the future. That could be assembling a weekly news brief every Friday afternoon, telling you what the weather will be like in New York City tomorrow morning at 9 a.m., or reminding you to renew your passport before January 20. ChatGPT will also send a push notification with relevant details. To use it, you'll need to select "4o with scheduled tasks" from the model picker menu, then tell the AI what you want it to do and when.

Read more