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Episodes and Stories 4
  • 0:50:00

    The Virtual Revolution The Cost of Free

    Episode 3
    Joined by some of the most influential business leaders of today's web, including Jeff Bezos (Chief Executive of Amazon), Eric Schmidt (Chief Executive of Google), Chad Hurley (Chief Executive of YouTube), Bill Gates, Martha Lane Fox and Reed Hastings (Chief Executive of Netflix), Aleks traces how business, with varying degrees of success, has attempted to make money on the web. She tells the inside story of the gold rush years of the dotcom bubble and reveals how retailers such as Amazon learned the lessons. She also charts how, out of the ashes, Google forged the business model that has come to dominate today's web, offering a plethora of highly attractive, overtly free web services, including search, maps and video, that are in fact funded through a sophisticated and highly lucrative advertising system which trades on what we users look for.
  • 0:50:00

    The Virtual Revolution Homo Interneticus?

    Episode 4
    Joined by Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg, Bill Gates, Al Gore and the neuroscientist Susan Greenfield, Aleks examines the popularity of social networks such as Facebook and asks how they are changing our relationships. And, in a ground-breaking test at University College London, Aleks investigates how the Web may be distracting and overloading our brains.
  • 0:50:00

    The Virtual Revolution The Great Levelling?

    Episode 1
    In the first in this four-part series, Aleks charts the extraordinary rise of blogs, Wikipedia and YouTube, and traces an ongoing clash between the freedom the technology offers us, and our innate human desire to control and profit.
  • 0:50:00

    The Virtual Revolution Enemy of the State?

    Episode 2
    In episode two, Aleks charts how the Web is forging a new brand of politics, both in democracies and authoritarian regimes. With contributions from Al Gore, Martha Lane Fox, Stephen Fry and Bill Gates, Aleks explores how interactive, unmediated sites like Twitter and YouTube have encouraged direct action and politicised young people in unprecedented numbers. Yet, at the same time, the Web's openness enables hardline states to spy and censor, and extremists to threaten with networks of hate and crippling cyber attacks.