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Audio: Rewiring Democracy with Godfather of Cybersecurity and Public Interest Technologist, Bruce Schneier

  • Humans in the Loop
  • October 28, 2025

Listen to the Audio on Apple Podcasts or Spotify

This episode features an OG in the world of internet security, the Godfather of Cybersecurity, Bruce Schneier. Bruce describes himself as a public interest technologist, and has done many things under that banner—run companies, lectured at Harvard, testified before Congress, authored over a dozen books, and written a blog for over 20 years that has more than 250k regular readers—to name just a few.

Key topics:

  • The need for better technical minds in policy making
  • The implications of AI for democracy (not as bleak as you might expect…

Video: The Brian Kilmeade Show

  • Fox News Radio
  • October 24, 2025

Watch the Video on YouTube.com

Bruce Schneier appeared on Fox News Radio’s The Brian Kilmeade Show to talk about his new book, Rewiring Democracy: How AI Will Transform Our Politics, Government, and Citizenship. The interview starts at 49:20 in the video.

Tech Experts See Artificial Intelligence as a Key Resource Ahead of Local Elections

  • Maya Y. Fu, Helia M. Hung, and Adelaide L.D. Roger
  • The Harvard Crimson
  • October 23, 2025

Cambridge’s local elections are just around the corner—and scientists Bruce Schneier and Nathan E. Sanders said that artificial intelligence will be a critical tool to help inform voters before they head to the polls.

Schneier and Sanders, a Harvard Kennedy School lecturer, co-authored the book "Rewiring Democracy" that was released on Oct. 21. The two appeared at a Cambridge Public Library panel to share more about how citizens can use AI to get involved in politics on Wednesday evening.

They noted that Cambridge’s municipal elections on Nov. 4 are a prime opportunity for voters to use AI. With the most crowded field of candidates in recent memory, Schneier—a New York Times bestselling author—said the technology can be used to help summarize information about candidates…

Video: Book Talk—Rewiring Democracy: How AI Will Transform Our Politics, Government, and Citizenship

  • Harvard Ash Center
  • October 23, 2025

Watch the Video on YouTube.com

Bruce Schneier and Nathan E. Sanders gave a talk about their book Rewiring Democracy: How AI Will Transform Our Politics, Government, and Citizenship at the Harvard Ash Center. The discussion was moderated by Danielle Allen, James Bryant Conant University Professor and Director of the Allen Lab.

Computers, the internet, and artificial intelligence continue to reshape our society—but many democratic institutions have yet to adapt. In “Rewiring Democracy,” the authors illuminate both the promises and pitfalls of technology in contemporary democracy. Drawing on real-world examples and innovative projects, Schneier and Sanders propose practical reforms, showing how civic technologists and engaged citizens alike can help remake democracy for the digital age…

Rewiring Democracy (But Not Too Much)—a Book Review

  • Malcolm Murray
  • 3 Quarks Daily
  • October 17, 2025

I recently finished reading Rewiring Democracy: How AI Will Transform Our Politics, Government and Citizenship—a book by Bruce Schneier and Nathan Sanders on the effects of AI on democracy. It comes out soon (October 25). It is a good read, worth reading for its myriad examples of AI in action at all levels of the democratic system. Ultimately, though, it seems to be a missed opportunity, failing to engage with many potential larger ways in which AI might affect democracy.

The book’s strength lies in its meticulous and hyper-granular description of all the ways that AI might affect elements of a democratic society, from enabling citizen power, to assisting in court cases, to empowering politicians. It offers many examples of how AI has been, will be, or could be adopted, for good and for ill. It maintains an admirably balanced and neutral stance throughout, detailing both the ways AI can be used to empower individual citizens, as well as how it could empower powerful vested interests. It is thoroughly organized, with separate sections on politics, legislation, administration, citizen and courts, and a starting briefer describing the relevant AI capabilities for each before outlining use cases and providing examples. The book admirably outlines the need for Public AI—AI as a common infrastructure provided by government, akin to water and electricity…

Video: What AI Is Doing to Politics Is Way Wilder Than You Imagined

  • Worth Knowing with Matt Robison
  • October 17, 2025

Watch the Video on SubStack.com
Listen to the Audio on Spotify.com

If you’re like me, you’re pretty damn tired of all the breathless AI talk.

AI’s going to supercharge the economy! No, it’s going to destroy all our jobs! AI will endow us with enhanced intelligence and mind-melded cognitive powers!! No, it’s pulping our brains and killing our ability to think!!1 AI will design medicines that make us live forever!!! No, it’s going to turn on us like Skynet and eventually machines are going to shoot lasers at the last few human survivors from atop a pile of skulls!!! …

Review of Rewiring Democracy

  • Ben Shneiderman
  • Human-Centered AI Google Group
  • October 9, 2025

Bruce Schneier and Nathan Sanders have been working on Rewiring Democracy: How AI Will Transform Our Politics, Government, and Citizenship (The MIT Press, Oct. 21, 2025). Their broad-ranging review imagines the many ways AI will impact politicians, legislators, administrators, jurists, and citizens. Their example-packed analyses, with calls to action, are largely hope-filled, with comments such as: “Despite the fantasies of some, we don;t anticipate that AIs will replace the humans who perform these tasks anytime soon. Nonetheless, over time, we expect that AI will make civil servants more effective at their jobs, and democracy more responsive to its constituents. Administrators and policymakers need to ensure that these efficiencies make government serve people better and more equitably.” They believe that: “Security is the biggest major barrier to using AI in democratic applications that no one seems to be talking about.” In general, Schneier and Sanders expect positive outcomes from AI implementations, but wisely warn of dangers: “If our goal is to ensure that AI generally benefits democracy rather than harms it, then we have a lot of work to do.” Their forward-looking scenarios mean that they repeatedly use words like: could, should, must, and can. They close with 7 organizing principles, such as “AI tools must be made widely available” and “AI developers and tools must be transparent.” Then they offer 4 paths such as promoting “responsible use of AI in society” so that “we may just be able to use this technology to rewire democracy to better serve all of us.” Overall, a valuable, wise, and balanced contribution in non-technical terms that will be welcomed by the five communities they address, and I hope the researchers and developers who could produce the happier outcomes the authors seek…

Audio: Bruce Schneier: Rewiring Democracy

  • From Nowhere to Nothing
  • October 5, 2025

Listen to the Audio on PodBean.com

In this episode, we discuss Bruce Schneier and Nathan E. Sanders’s upcoming book,  Rewiring Democracy: How AI Will Transform Our Politics, Government, and Citizenship.

Video: Office Hours with David Meltzer

  • Office Hours with David Meltzer
  • October 2, 2025

Watch the Video on LinkedIn.com
Listen to the Audio on Podcasts.Apple.com

Bruce Schneier joined David Meltzer to discuss AI and Democracy.

Rewiring Democracy: Bruce Schneier and Nathan E. Sanders on AI, Power, and the Future of Governance

How will AI reshape democratic institutions and policymaking in the 21st century?

  • Scott Douglas Jacobsen
  • Good Men Project
  • September 25, 2025

Rewiring Democracy: How AI Will Transform Our Politics, Government, and Citizenship is Bruce Schneier and Nathan E. Sanders’ field guide to governing in the algorithmic age. Drawing on real projects and policy debates, it maps how AI is already reshaping lawmaking, regulation, courts, and civic participation—and shows how to bend the tech toward equity, transparency, and public accountability. Rather than dystopian panic or hype, the authors offer a pragmatic roadmap: reform and regulate AI, resist harmful deployments, responsibly use AI to improve services, and renovate democratic institutions so power is distributed, not concentrated. Publication: MIT Press, October 21, 2025, globally…

Sidebar photo of Bruce Schneier by Joe MacInnis.