927 Episodes

  1. The internet must be preserved (Brewster Kahle, chairman, The Internet Archive)

    Published: 01/03/2017
  2. How to make social media sane again (Sue Decker, Raftr founder, and Michael Dearing, investor)

    Published: 27/02/2017
  3. Silicon Valley is 'an isolated bubble' (Jeremy Liew, partner, Lightspeed Venture Partners)

    Published: 22/02/2017
  4. Uber's looming 'existential crisis' (Brad Stone, author, 'The Upstarts’)

    Published: 20/02/2017
  5. Countries that fear immigrants are killing innovation (Rolf Schrömgens, co-founder, Trivago)

    Published: 15/02/2017
  6. Facebook's News Feed is like junk food (Mike McCue, CEO, Flipboard)

    Published: 13/02/2017
  7. BONUS: 'Fun Home' author Alison Bechdel thought a fan was her Uber

    Published: 08/02/2017
  8. We need robots to take our jobs (John Markoff, ex-reporter, The New York Times)

    Published: 06/02/2017
  9. How you get addicted to apps (Tristan Harris, founder, Time Well Spent)

    Published: 30/01/2017
  10. Social media makes us miserable (Tim Ferriss, author, "Tools of Titans")

    Published: 23/01/2017
  11. Secretary of Transportation Anthony Foxx: The exit interview

    Published: 16/01/2017
  12. You don't need to own all your clothes (Jennifer Hyman, CEO, Rent the Runway)

    Published: 09/01/2017
  13. Doctors should think like mechanics (Othman Laraki, CEO, Color)

    Published: 02/01/2017
  14. Can social media bring us together again after ripping us apart? (Orkut Büyükkökten, Founder, Hello)

    Published: 27/12/2016
  15. Tom Friedman: The internet is an 'open sewer’

    Published: 19/12/2016
  16. Reddit CEO Steve Huffman: A 'toxic minority' ruins social media for everyone

    Published: 12/12/2016
  17. Wearables can save your life (Vic Gundotra, CEO, AliveCor)

    Published: 05/12/2016
  18. What Trump means for tech (Hilary Rosen and Juleanna Glover, political consultants)

    Published: 28/11/2016
  19. Satirizing Silicon Valley: 'I wanted to hit a nerve,' says Sunil Rajaraman

    Published: 21/11/2016
  20. How Kayak co-founder Paul English got hit by a ‘truck full of money’

    Published: 14/11/2016

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Decoder is a show from The Verge about big ideas — and other problems. Verge editor-in-chief Nilay Patel talks to a diverse cast of innovators and policymakers at the frontiers of business and technology to reveal how they’re navigating an ever-changing landscape, what keeps them up at night, and what it all means for our shared future.

Visit the podcast's native language site