From Statecraft to Codebreaking: The Big Data Origin Story with Chris Wiggins, Chief Data Scientist at The New York Times

Data Radicals - A podcast by Alation - Wednesdays

Categories:

If you’re a history buff in the data world, you know that there’s a complex interplay between data, statecraft, and machine learning. The history of data visualization is entwined with societal governance and technological advancements, starting from the usage of statistics for statecraft in the 18th century to the transformative innovations during World War II that birthed computation and data science as we know it. And because of the subjective design choices that underpin data gathering and analysis, there’s an inherently political nature of deciding what data to collect and how to utilize it, which is critical in understanding both historical and contemporary data practices. As we move into the modern applications of data science and the advent of AI technologies, deep reinforcement learning and the integration with generative AI models, these technologies are reshaping the field by enabling computers to process and interact with unstructured data in unprecedented ways. Satyen and Chris discuss his book How Data Happened, the origins of data science and the role of Alan Turing in the creation of digital computing, and the challenges generative AI brings around model interoperability. *Satyen’s narration was created using AI