Episode

The Power of Prediction

Podcast
Easy Prey
Published
Apr 22, 2026
Duration seconds
2361
Processing state
not_requested
Canonical source
https://www.easyprey.com/320
Audio
https://traffic.libsyn.com/secure/easyprey/EP320.mp3?dest-id=1655398
JSON
/v1/public/podcasts/easy-prey-456730/episodes/the-power-of-prediction
Markdown
/podcast/easy-prey-456730/the-power-of-prediction.md

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Summary

We make predictions all the time including about the weather, about traffic, about what someone is going to say next. It feels natural, even rational. But when algorithms start making predictions about us, whether we'll repay a loan, reoffend after prison, or respond to a medical treatment, something fundamental shifts. The forecast stops being a guess and starts becoming a verdict. My guest today is Carissa Veliz, a philosopher and associate professor at the University of Oxford, where she also researches at the Oxford Internet Institute. Her work focuses on the ethics of technology, privacy, and artificial intelligence, and she advises companies and governments around the world on these issues. She's the author of the widely acclaimed book Privacy is Power, The Ethics of Privacy and Surveillance, and her new book, Prophecy: Prediction, Power, and the Fight for the Future, from Ancient Oracles to AI, is out now. We talk about how the role of prophet has simply changed costumes throughout history from oracles and astrologers to economists and now tech executives and why that matters more than most people realize. Carissa explains how predictions about human beings are fundamentally different from predictions about the weather, why so many AI-driven forecasts are closer to commands than hypotheses, and what it actually looks like to take back your agency in a world increasingly shaped by algorithms. Show Notes: [01:13] Carissa Veliz shares her background in philosophy, ethics, and advising companies and governments on technology and data. [02:35] She explains how prediction has existed throughout human history, from survival instincts to ancient prophecy. [03:49] The role of "prophets" evolves over time—from oracles and astrologers to economists, data scientists, and te…