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CoinDesk Live: Understanding Our Digital Personas Feat. Alex McDougall
“If we don’t fix the data paradigm...we don’t really have free will,” says Alex McDougall of Bicameral Ventures.

Sign up to join the next CoinDesk Live on Thursday, April 23 at 4pm eastern time, as we dig into the legal battle for QuadrigaCX users with Magdalena Gronowska, QuadrigaCX Bankruptcy Board of Inspectors and a Committee Member of the Official Committee of Affected Users, hosted by CoinDesk editors Zack Seward and Nikhilesh De
Welcome to a reboot of CoinDesk Live: Lockdown Edition, a livestream series in which CoinDesk journalists and virtual audience members chat with speakers from Consensus: Distributed, our first virtual conference, set for May 11-15.
For more episodes and free early access, subscribe with Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Pocketcasts, Google Podcasts, Castbox, Stitcher, RadioPublica, IHeartRadio or RSS.
“If we don’t fix the data paradigm...we don’t really have free will.”
— CoinDesk (@CoinDesk) April 16, 2020
@AlexM_Bicameral #ConsensusDistributed https://t.co/SUSXm9BtYg
Our digital personas are becoming the primary way we interact with the world, particularly during this worldwide pandemic. But we only see a tiny bit of the information being captured while we’re online, and we rarely know for what our personal data is being used. While most free services are basically powered by the sale of our personal data, there’s no interface to help us understand what we actually look like to data collectors and their customers.
In this kickoff episode, CoinDesk journalist Bailey Reutzel speaks with Alex McDougall of Bicameral Ventures about the data trails we leave behind when we surf the internet, and how users can take back some control of that data.
Bailey and Alex discuss:
- Free apps like House Party that collect our information
- Project MetaMe, Alex’s single sign-on mechanism that brings back all the data on other platforms, allowing people to manage and even sell it themselves
- Contract tracing, a necessary evil or just evil?
- Is the Apple-Google solution the worst of all worlds, with an option to opt out as well as trusting mediocre data stewards?
- As health data is clearly valuable to Google, many people simply don’t trust Google with their health data
- Pros and cons of these privacy tools such as DuckDuckGo, Brave Browser, Ghostery, Lockdown and Loginhood
- The book “Surveillance Capitalism”
- Dystopian Fiction
- The book “Snow Crash”
- zkSNARKS for data
- How self-soverign meta-versions of ourselves might help protect us from “lizard brain” manipulation, by providing cleaner thinking versions of ourselves
- The book Alex is working on, “The Lizard and the Machine: Maintaining Human Integrity at a Machine-Speed World”
Alex McDougall on Twitter: @AlexM_Bicameral
Bailey Reutzel on Twitter: @BLR13
Next up
Sign up to join the next CoinDesk Live on Tuesday, April 21, with Priyanka Desai and Aaron Wright from The Lao as we discuss for-profit DAOs.
Then join us at Consensus: Distributed May 11-15.

For more episodes and free early access before our regular 4 p.m. Eastern time releases, subscribe with Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Pocketcasts, Google Podcasts, Castbox, Stitcher, RadioPublica, IHeartRadio or RSS.
Adam B. Levine
Adam B. Levine joined CoinDesk in 2019 as the editor of its new audio and podcasts division. Previously, Adam founded the long-running Let's Talk Bitcoin! talk show with co-hosts Stephanie Murphy and Andreas M. Antonopoulos. Finding early success with the show, Adam transformed the podcast's homepage into a full newsdesk and publishing platform, founding the LTB Network in January of 2014 to help broaden the conversation with new and different perspectives. In the Spring of that year, he would go on to launch the first and largest tokenized rewards program for creators and their audience. In what many have called an early influential version of "Steemit"; LTBCOIN, which was awarded to both content creators and members of the audience for participation was distributed until the LTBN was acquired by BTC, Inc. in January of 2017. With the network launched and growing, in late 2014 Adam turned his attention to the practical challenges of administering the tokenized program and founded Tokenly, Inc. There, he led the development of early tokenized vending machines with Swapbot, tokenized identity solution Tokenpass, e-commerce with TokenMarkets.com and media with Token.fm. Adam owns some BTC, ETH and small positions in a number of other tokens.
