Tag: rewiring democracy
6 articles

Rewiring Democracy Exclusive: Best Paths for Reform
Rewiring Democracy asks: as AI rewrites our political infrastructure, who will teach the machines to learn — and safeguard — our democratic values? This urgent, clear-eyed book maps the reforms we need before algorithms reshape civic life.

Rewiring Democracy: Must-See Cambridge Events Best
Join Bruce Schneier and Nathan E. Sanders in Cambridge and online as they unpack Rewiring Democracy—three public events (a Harvard book talk, an evening signing at Cambridge Public Library, and a Data & Society virtual conversation) that turn technical diagnosis into practical civic solutions.

Rewiring Democracy: Stunning Risks Ahead
What if the platforms that expanded our public square began shaping what we think? In Rewiring Democracy, Bruce Schneier shows how AI-driven persuasion, automated governance, and synthetic media could rewrite politics — and urges us to decide who will redraw our democratic wiring.

Rewiring Democracy: Must-See Tour Dates & Best Talks
Join the Rewiring Democracy tour this fall—four can’t-miss events in Cambridge, online, Strasbourg and Toronto where the author turns ideas into lively public debate through talks, signings and forums; check host pages for registration and updates.

Rewiring Democracy Exclusive Must-Have Signed Copies
Grab a limited signed copy of Bruce Schneier’s Rewiring Democracy—pre-orders are open now and will ship the week of October 20, so secure this collectible that connects you directly to a timely, must-read guide for defending democracy in the digital age.

Rewiring Democracy: Exclusive Must-Have Roadmap
In Rewiring Democracy, Bruce Schneier and Nathan Sanders warn that AI is reshaping our institutions and offer an urgent, practical roadmap to embed transparency, accountability, and human oversight so democracies can reap AI’s benefits without losing public trust. Covering elections, lawmaking, administration, courts, and civic life, their concrete reforms show how governments can act now to prevent opacity and strengthen democratic norms.