FUTUREPROOF.
Welcome to FUTUREPROOF. We're the podcast that delves into the future. From Augmented Reality to Artificial Intelligence to Smart Cities to Internet of Things to Virtual Reality, we speak with some of the sharpest minds to better help you understand what the next few years may look like.Brought to you by author Jeremy Goldman (Going Social, Getting to Like).For booking inquiries: vie@futureproofshow.com
FUTUREPROOF.
The Storytelling Revolution: Why Humanity's Earliest Innovation Still Matters (ft. author Kevin Ashton)
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In this episode of FUTUREPROOF., we sit down with Kevin Ashton—the technologist who coined the term Internet of Things and helped usher in the smartphone era—to talk about something even more foundational than AI.
Stories.
In his new book, The Story of Stories, Kevin traces a million-year arc—from the first fires where early humans gathered, to the invention of writing and printing, to electricity, electronics, and the smartphone. His thesis is provocative: language did not create stories. Stories created language.
Every major storytelling revolution has followed a simple pattern: it increases the number of people who can tell stories—and the number of people who can hear them.
For the first time in history, anyone can tell stories to everyone.
But there’s a catch.
While AI cannot understand meaning, algorithms now determine which stories we see, amplifying bias, shaping belief, and influencing behavior at scale. The power of storytelling has never been more democratized—or more intermediated.
We explore:
- Why storytelling is innate, not cultural
- The eight great revolutions of human communication
- Why machines can generate content but not meaning
- The risks of algorithmic amplification
- The role of critical thinking in a post-scarcity information world
- Whether the next storytelling revolution is technological—or cognitive
This conversation isn’t about nostalgia.
It’s about understanding the oldest human technology in a moment when the newest one is accelerating everything.
If we think in stories—and we always will—the question becomes:
Who shapes the stories that shape us?