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Fact & Friction

Fact & Friction

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Fact & Friction explores the ideas, tensions, and truths shaping how we think today. Through calm, structured conversations, each episode examines where evidence meets opinion — and where clarity is often lost in noise. Created for those who value thoughtful discussion over quick conclusions, this podcast invites listeners to slow down, question assumptions, and engage more deliberately with the world around them.Copyright 2026 Luminae Philosophie Sciences sociales
Épisodes
  • Rabbit Holing: How Curiosity Gets Hijacked
    May 15 2026

    Episode 2 - Rabbit Holing: How Curiosity Gets Hijacked

    Why recommendation systems quietly steer curiosity toward more extreme content.

    Episode Overview

    Most people have experienced the online rabbit hole. You open a platform to watch one short video or read a single post, and twenty minutes later you find yourself deep into a topic you never intended to explore. It feels natural – like curiosity simply leading you from one idea to the next.

    In this episode of Fact & Friction, Sean and Harry examine why that experience is rarely accidental. Modern recommendation systems are designed to maximise engagement, and one of the most effective ways to do that is to gradually guide users toward content that is slightly more dramatic, surprising, or emotionally engaging than what came before.

    The conversation explores why the traditional idea of 'filter bubbles' only tells part of the story. Rather than simply showing people what they already agree with, many platforms accelerate curiosity by nudging users along a chain of increasingly compelling recommendations. Understanding how this process works helps listeners recognise when curiosity is being quietly steered – and how to slow the process when necessary.

    In This Episode

    • Why online rabbit holes feel like natural curiosity rather than guided exploration
    • Why the popular idea of 'filter bubbles' does not fully explain modern recommendation systems
    • How engagement algorithms learn from watch time, clicks, and behavioural signals
    • Why slightly more extreme or dramatic content tends to keep attention longer
    • Simple habits that help interrupt the rabbit hole and restore deliberate choice

    The Point of Friction

    • Common narrative: The internet traps people inside echo chambers that reinforce existing beliefs.
    • Underlying reality: Many recommendation systems instead accelerate curiosity, guiding users toward increasingly intense or engaging content because those pathways keep people watching longer.

    Why It Matters

    Curiosity is one of the most powerful drivers of learning and discovery. However, when engagement systems quietly guide that curiosity, the journey can lead somewhere very different from where the user intended to go. Over time, these recommendation pathways can shape what topics feel urgent, interesting, or important. Recognising the mechanics behind rabbit holing allows listeners to maintain the benefits of curiosity while retaining control over where their attention ultimately goes.

    Listener Reflection

    When you follow a chain of recommendations online, are you consciously exploring a subject – or are the recommendations quietly guiding your curiosity for you?

    Next Episode

    In Episode 3 we examine something even less visible: emotional A/B testing. We explore how headlines, images, and notifications are constantly tested to discover which versions trigger the strongest emotional reactions.

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    30 min
  • The Attention Engine
    May 1 2026

    Episode Overview

    Most of us assume that what we see online is largely the result of our own choices. In reality, much of the modern internet is shaped by recommendation systems designed to keep our attention for as long as possible.

    These systems learn continuously from our behaviour - what we click, how long we pause on a post, what we watch to the end - and use those signals to decide what appears next in our feeds.

    In this episode of Fact & Friction, we explore the 'attention engine' behind modern digital platforms. Harry and Sean unpack how engagement‑driven algorithms work, why emotionally charged content tends to travel further, and how repeated exposure subtly shapes what feels important, urgent, or interesting. The goal is not to criticise technology but to understand the incentives behind it, and to give listeners practical ways to regain control over where their attention goes.

    In This Episode

    • How recommendation algorithms learn from clicks, pauses, and watch time
    • Why engagement - not accuracy - is often the core metric shaping online feeds
    • How emotional and novelty‑driven content spreads faster than neutral information
    • The subtle signals that indicate your attention is being steered
    • Simple habits that introduce friction and help you regain control of your digital focus

    The Point of Friction

    • Common narrative: Social media simply shows you the content you choose to engage with.
    • Underlying reality: Engagement algorithms actively shape those choices by amplifying the content most likely to keep you watching, scrolling, and reacting.

    Why It Matters

    Attention sits upstream of many decisions we make each day. What we see repeatedly influences what we think about, what we feel is important, and how we interpret events. When digital systems are designed primarily to maximise engagement, they naturally prioritise content that captures emotion and curiosity. Understanding how these systems operate helps listeners recognise when their attention is being nudged, and restores the ability to choose where their focus truly belongs.

    Listener Reflection

    What captured your attention online today, and did you deliberately choose it, or did it appear repeatedly until it felt important, and you’d spent a lot more time engaged with it than you intended?

    Next Episode

    In Episode 2 we explore 'rabbit holing' - how recommendation systems can quietly steer curiosity toward increasingly dramatic or extreme content, often without the user realising the journey is being guided.

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    30 min
  • Where it Begins - introducing Fact & Friction
    Apr 23 2026
    Fact & Friction – IntroductionThis introductory episode sets the scene for Fact & Friction who we are, why we’re doing this, and the questions and topics we’ll be working through in the months ahead.Background & PurposeWe live in a world where headlines are written to grab attention rather than to clarify. Spin, selective framing, and deliberate distraction often cloud the truth, leaving people polarised, misinformed, or simply exhausted by the noise.Fact & Friction was born out of the need to slow down, strip away the theatre of contemporary media, and examine what’s really going on when narratives clash. Every episode dives into the points of tension - the 'friction' - where fact meets spin, where evidence collides with ideology, and where competing truths are put to the test.Our purpose is to unpick, challenge, and illuminate. We aim to help listeners see through the haze of modern media, offering clarity without oversimplification.This is the space where critical thinking lives: not in the comfortable consensus, but in the sparks that fly when truth is forced into collision with power, bias, and perception.Why It MattersPeople should be aware of ‘clickbait’ and be able to find the ‘truth’ and ‘depth’ they want.Understanding the ‘friction points’ of an issue reveals more than surface-level reporting ever could and - we contend - allows the listener to (re)find balance and form reasoned judgements.In a noisy world, truth deserves a fighting chance.Our IntentOur intent is simple: cut through the noise without adding to it - to illuminate - shine a light on the issues at the centre of our information era.We’re not here to re-hash tired disinformation narratives or scaremonger about “the media”. Fact & Friction exists to take real, contemporary forces - from engagement-hungry algorithms to the invisible design choices shaping what we see online - and explain them in a way that’s genuinely interesting, uncomfortably revealing, and completely grounded in reality.Most importantly, we’ll show listeners why these forces matter to them, and what they can do - if they choose - to reclaim agency in a digital environment built to steer, nudge, and distract. Each episode finds the spark point where fact meets friction, and gives people something practical, something to take away and action.Meet Your HostsHarry comes from a background in intelligence, security, and strategic analysis, where much of his career has been spent trying to make sense of complex situations with incomplete and often conflicting information. Like his co-host, Sean, that process never really stops – only the environment changes.What has become increasingly clear to him is that the challenge is no longer access to information, but making sense of it. We now live in an environment saturated with data, competing narratives, and constant noise, where distinguishing signal from distraction is both harder - and more important - than ever. He believes we are operating in information environments that humans were never really designed for, where attention is constantly pulled and the longer-term effects on how we think and make decisions are still not fully understood.That concern sits behind Luminae and Fact & Friction. The aim is not to provide answers or tell people what to think, but to help them understand how information is shaped, how narratives take hold, and why we often see the world the way we do.At home, this often surfaces as enthusiastic monologues about whatever he’s currently reading – rarely mainstream, always fascinating (at least to him) - usually met with a mixture of interest, patience, and the occasional “what on earth are you going on about?”When he’s not doing that, he’s normally outside or on the move - most often on an adventure motorcycle, where things are a bit simpler and the signal-to-noise ratio is refreshingly low.Sean is a career intelligence officer, having spent most of his time in uniform in hot (and cold) unpleasant places, trying to work out what was going on. As a veteran, he is still trying to work out what is going on, but now from the comfort of his own home and producing intelligence derived from ‘open’ sources.Like Harry, Sean doesn’t do things by halves. If he says he’s going to do something, he’s all in, and will do his utmost to make it work, whatever is thrown at him – the ‘personal moral contract’ as he calls it. Luminae provides the perfect medium through which he can do that, an initiative about which he is passionate and committed, and which really matters if our youth is to successfully navigate such a pivotal time in our history.In many ways, Luminae is the natural evolution of his time in the intelligence community. Distilling large amounts of disparate and incomplete information to form an objective understanding has been central to what he does. The explosion of publicly available data has made that task harder, as noise drowns ...
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    27 min
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