I've been feeling a lot of panic
and fear about this talk.
And not just for the normal reasons
of public speaking,
although that's there, too.
But it's also because I want
to say something meaningful,
and I've been overwhelmed by the enormity
of what is happening right now.
And there's a particular
set of circumstances
which have also been feeding
into my confusion and denial.
And that is because the last time
that I stood on this stage,
it led to a three-year legal battle,
culminated in London's High Court,
in which it felt
like I was on trial for my life,
because I was.
My career, my reputation, my finances,
even my home was on the line.
All because I came here
to warn you
that I didn't think democracy
was going to survive the technology
that you're building,
however incredible it is.
In fact, I was the person
who almost didn't survive,
and pretty much everything
I was warning about is now coming true.
I can't sugarcoat it.
It's a bit of a headfuck.
(Laughter)
I have a lot of emotions
about coming here.
And TED, also, I suspect,
is feeling them too.
But what actually
I finally realized yesterday
is that the denial and the confusion
that I've been feeling
is maybe what you're feeling, too.
I felt powerless for a really long time.
So if that's what
you're feeling, I get it.
But we have to act now.
My alarm system is ringing again.
There are things that we can do.
In my case, I survived.
And you will too.
But it's by learning how to fight back.
This is my guide,
and it has to start with naming it.
It's a coup.
I know you probably don't want
to hear that, and especially here,
but we can’t fight it if we can’t see it.
And we can’t see it if we don’t name it.
(Applause)
The Russian and American presidents
are now speaking the same words.
They are telling the same lies.
We are watching the collapse
of the international order in real time.
And this is just the start.
Coups are like concrete.
When they stop moving, they set.
It is already later than we think.
This image, some of you
in this room might know these people.
I call it tech bros in hostage situations.
It's a message to you.
This is Putin's playbook.
He allows a business elite
to make untold riches
in exchange for absolute loyalty.
Some people are calling this oligarchy,
but it's actually bigger than that.
These are global platforms.
It's broligarchy.
[Tech bros + oligarchy = broligarchy]
(Laughter and murmuring)
(Applause)
There is an alignment of interests
that runs through Silicon Valley
to what is now a coming autocracy.
It's a type of power that the world
has never seen before.
[Follow the data]
It's always the data.
It's the crack cocaine of Silicon Valley.
You know, the first thing
that Elon Musk did
was to send his cyber troops
into the US Treasury
to get access to the data.
That is not a coincidence.
It's a hack.
That data is now feeding AIs
that are choosing who to sack
and who to replace --
Sorry -- eliminate fraud and waste.
(Laughter)
When we broke the
Cambridge Analytica story
about the harvesting [of]
87 million people’s Facebook data,
people freaked out, rightly.
[That] is chicken feed compared to [this].
But it is the blueprint.
It's always the data.
Which is why it's so important
that you start thinking
about your private life.
The broligarchy doesn't
want you to have one.
This is the old headquarters
of the East German secret police.
They kept detailed files
on almost one in three of their citizens.
That is nothing compared
to what Google has
on every single one of us,
and hundreds of other companies.
The entire business model
of Silicon Valley is surveillance.
It harvests our data
in order to sell us stuff.
We are already living inside
the architecture of totalitarianism.
(Cheers)
(Applause)
It may not have been deliberate,
but we now have to start acting
as if we live in East Germany,
and Instagram is the Stasi.
Politics is downstream from culture.
So I actually learned this from somebody
who I think of as one of the great
philosophers of our age,
Steve Bannon.
(Laughter)
He actually stole it from somebody else.
But it's not politicians
who have the power.
He knows that.
It's why he's a podcast bro, these days.
But culture now is just
what's next on your phone.
And that's AI.
Culture is AI now.
And forget the killer robots.
If you want to know what
the first great AI apocalypse is,
we're already living it.
It's total information collapse.
And if you take one thing
only away from this talk,
it's politics is technology now.
And that's why everybody in this room,
you can't look away.
It's why your CEOs have been taken captive
and are paraded on TV like hostages.
But you, you have a choice.
So Trump, he calls the press
the enemies of the people.
And he probably doesn't even know
that he's quoting Stalin.
So what happened to me is a playbook,
and it's now coming
for all sorts of other people.
It was actually a friend of this guy
who came after me.
This is Nigel Farage.
He's a Brexit funder.
I'm not going to go super
into the details.
But 19 press-freedom organizations
called the lawsuit against me a SLAPP.
That means it’s a Strategic
Litigation Against Public Participation.
A really long-winded way of saying
it's using law as a weapon
to shut people up.
Not just journalists,
but other public people, too.
And it works.
I just wanted to tell you
about one aspect of the litigation,
which I found terrifying.
And that was the data harvesting.
There's this quote you may know,
it's Cardinal Richelieu,
"If you give me six lines
written by the hand
of the most honest of men,
I will find something
in them which will hang him."
In my case,
the first forensic searches
of my phone and laptop
yielded 40,000 pieces of data.
It was my messages, my emails,
my voice memos, my personal life.
And the whole thing about this,
the attack which came for me,
was really personal.
Because the thing about this litigation
is only one part of the playbook.
It was also this sort of massive
online campaign of abuse,
which is just day after day,
after day, after day.
Because my most unforgivable
crime was reporting while female.
It was a digital witch burning.
And I believe that this man came
after me personally,
not at "The Guardian" and not TED,
it was because I looked
like the weakest link.
But he was wrong.
(Cheers and applause)
30,000 people rose up to support me.
They contributed almost
a million pounds to a legal defense fund.
Because they saw a bully
trying to crush me,
and they would not let it stand.
And it always makes me
emotional when I think about that.
I just heard somebody was saying,
the camera person,
I don't know where they are, contributed.
This whole talk is actually my gratitude
towards everybody who did that.
But it's also why I know
about what we have to do next.
You know, Trump is suing
news organizations,
and every day they're settling.
These are big corporates
with corporate interests.
Not everybody can stand up to power,
but there are people who are doing it,
and we can support them.
We have to have
each other’s backs right now.
Because we are the cavalry now.
You know, this is really important to me,
but I spoke to a UK libel lawyer
before this talk.
I want to say that there is
an awful lot of facts set down
in a High Court judgment,
and we're actually taking the case now
to the European Court of Human Rights.
We're testing the UK on its laws
around freedom of expression.
So look after facts.
You'll miss them when they've gone.
This is Wayback Machine.
Give them money,
they're trying to preserve the internet
as it's being deleted day by day.
(Applause)
History is our best chance
of getting out of this.
You know, you probably know this phrase,
"Do not obey in advance."
That's Tim Snyder, who's a historian
of authoritarianism.
We now are in techno-authoritarianism.
We have to learn how to digitally disobey.
That can be as simple
as the dropdown box.
Don't accept the cookies,
don't give your real name,
download Signal,
the encrypted messaging app.
Don’t bomb Yemen,
don't add the editor
of "The Atlantic" to your group chats.
(Laughter)
Don't experiment on children.
You know, social mores change.
We don't send children
down coal mines anymore.
And in years to come,
allowing your child to be
data-harvested from birth
will be considered child abuse.
You didn't know, but now you do.
Privacy is power.
And we have more of it than we think.
I had this little epiphany yesterday
in which I realized, actually,
the moments when I felt most powerless
were the moments that I felt
I was actually most powerful.
It was because my journalism had impact.
They want us to feel powerless.
That's the plan.
There is so much, though,
that we can learn from people
who've been through this before.
Alexei Navalny,
the leader of the Russian opposition,
he always talked about a beautiful
Russia of the future.
He painted a vision.
There is a beautiful
internet of the future,
free from corporate capture
and data tracking.
We can build it.
It is going to take a movement.
But we can learn from movements
that there have been before us.
This is my colleagues and I
on strike in December
because my news
organization, "The Guardian,"
decided to sell our corner of it,
“The Observer,” the Sunday title.
And it was a battle we really
didn’t need at this time,
and we didn’t actually win,
but you know, you can’t win every battle.
But you definitely won’t win
if you don’t fight.
(Applause)
So I want to leave you with this.
This is ChatGPT
writing a TED Talk
in the style of Carole Cadwalladr.
And it is creepily plausible.
But what it doesn't know,
because AI is actually as dumb as a rock,
is that I am going to turn to Sam Altman,
who is coming here, a TED speaker,
and say that this does not belong to you.
ChatGPT has been trained on my IP,
my labor, my personal data.
(Applause and cheers)
And I did not consent.
You know, "The Guardian"
has effectively got rid
of more than 100 journalists.
We actually leave the building next week.
And shortly afterwards,
it signed a syndication deal with OpenAI.
Or, as I think of it,
it married its rapist.
But I do not consent.
And while we still have
copyright laws in my country,
UK government is trying
to tear them up at the moment
in order to suck up
to Silicon Valley and Trump.
But while we have them, use them.
Because what is happening to my industry
is happening to yours, too.
And it's more than theft.
It's a violation.
Data rights are human rights.
(Applause)
In 2019,
I came here, and I called out
the gods of Silicon Valley.
I was wrong.
Sam Altman, Mark Zuckerberg, Elon Musk,
you are not gods.
You are men, and you are careless.
(Applause and cheers)
You think that by allying
yourself with an autocrat
you will be protected.
That's not how history works.
It's not even how oligarchy works.
This is Mikhail Khodorkovsky.
He was an oligarch
until he was sent to Siberia,
to prison for 10 years,
after Putin tired of him.
You are sucking up to a tyrant ...
who is trying to destroy the laws
who made your businesses possible.
You are collaborators.
You are complicit in a regime
of fear and cruelty.
But the rest of us,
we all here, we have a choice.
I chose to come back to TED
because I'm reclaiming my story, my words.
(Cheers and applause)
We are not powerless.
The 30,000 people who supported me
proved that -- we are not powerless.
Because we know who we are,
and we know what we stand for.
And my question to Silicon Valley is,
do you?
Thank you.
(Cheers and applause)