Ethics & Policy
9 Life-Changing Books Recommended by Karlie Kloss
9 Life-Changing Books Recommended by Karlie Kloss (Picture Credit – Instagram)
This global bestseller surveys human evolution from ancient hunter-gatherers to modern technocrats. Kloss admires its clarity and breadth, calling it a crash course in who we are. Harari’s narrative links myths, money, religion, and power to show how humans built civilisations. ‘Sapiens’ doesn’t merely inform—it provokes. It asks readers to question what’s natural, what’s invented, and what’s next. Every chapter delivers insight into the choices that shaped society, making this book both educational and unsettling in the best way. Through vivid storytelling and sharp analysis, it challenges assumptions and invites readers to reconsider history’s impact on present realities and future possibilities.
2. Shoe Dog by Phil Knight
Nike’s co-founder recounts the emotional chaos behind building a global brand. Kloss recommends it for its raw honesty and entrepreneurial fire. ‘Shoe Dog’ reveals Knight’s doubts, missteps, and stubborn drive during Nike’s earliest days. It’s a behind-the-scenes memoir about risks taken when nothing is certain. Instead of offering formulaic advice, Knight shares the messy, human story of growth. For creatives and business-minded readers alike, it’s a reminder that great ventures come from resilience, vision, and the courage to persist. The book reveals how failure and uncertainty are not obstacles but essential parts of innovation and meaningful success.
3. The Four Agreements by Don Miguel Ruiz
This spiritual classic draws from Toltec wisdom to offer four principles: be impeccable with your word, don’t take things personally, don’t assume, and always do your best. Kloss values it as a guide for emotional resilience and personal clarity. Each agreement strips away unnecessary tension and invites greater self-awareness. In a noisy world full of comparison and pressure, this book champions peace over chaos. Short but profound, it’s a toolkit for living with intention, accountability, and quiet strength. It’s simple practices guide readers toward clarity, balance, and a deeper connection to what truly matters amid life’s distractions.
4. The Ride of a Lifetime by Robert Iger
Robert Iger charts his journey from low-level TV assistant to Disney’s celebrated CEO. Kloss praises this memoir for its wisdom on integrity, risk, and calm decision-making. Iger shares tough lessons on leadership, offering anecdotes from acquisitions and cultural shifts. He emphasises empathy, curiosity, and humility—not bravado as essentials for effective management.‘The Ride of a Lifetime’ stands out for being both humble and high-level. It’s not about power for its own sake, but about building a legacy through thoughtful, ethical choices. The book offers lessons on leadership, empathy, and resilience, inspiring readers to lead with integrity and create a lasting positive impact beyond personal success.
Harari turns his lens to the future in this provocative sequel to ‘Sapiens.’ He explores humanity’s next steps, including AI, biotech, and algorithmic decision-making. Kloss finds its speculation thrilling and deeply intellectual. ‘Homo Deus’ challenges assumptions about consciousness, ethics, and the meaning of life in a tech-driven world. Harari’s tone remains accessible even when asking huge questions. Readers finish the book not just wondering what comes next, but what kind of future they want to help create, shape, and question. His insights provoke thoughtful reflection on technology, humanity, and ethics, encouraging active engagement with the challenges and possibilities ahead.
6. A Curious Mind by Brian Grazer
Oscar-winning producer Brian Grazer explains how curiosity has driven his work and personal growth. Kloss recommends it for showing how simple questions can open powerful doors. The book blends Hollywood anecdotes with reflections on learning from unexpected people. Grazer treats curiosity not as a personality trait but as a daily discipline. He uses curiosity to challenge norms, connect with others, and navigate uncertainty. Inspiring and practical, the book urges readers to stay open-minded, ask questions, and chase insight relentlessly. Through real-world examples and thoughtful guidance, it cultivates a mindset that embraces change, innovation, and lifelong learning as essential to success and fulfilment.
7. My Life on the Road by Gloria Steinem
Steinem reflects on a life of travel, activism, and feminist thought in this memoir. Kloss calls it grounding and powerful, especially for women redefining their paths. The book isn’t about destination—it’s about movement, connection, and conversation. Steinem’s recollections highlight how change happens when stories are shared. She shows how listening can be as revolutionary as speaking. ‘My Life on the Road’ is a deeply empathetic portrait of social change built on persistence, flexibility, and the will to keep showing up.
8. Unstoppable by Bill Nye
Science meets urgency in this lively manifesto on climate change and innovation. Kloss appreciates Nye’s ability to make complex science feel approachable and urgent. ‘Unstoppable’ doesn’t just warn—it activates. Nye combines facts with personal stories to show how individuals can make a difference. His tone is optimistic, not alarmist, creating space for engagement over fear. Whether you’re an activist or just science-curious, this book invites participation. It’s a call to protect the planet through collective, informed, and creative action. By blending facts with inspiring stories, it motivates readers to become responsible stewards and catalysts for environmental change in their communities and beyond.
9. The Woman I Wanted to Be by Diane Von Furstenberg
Fashion icon Diane Von Furstenberg shares her journey of becoming not just famous, but fulfilled. Kloss loves this memoir for its candour and bold self-invention. From early privilege to career struggles, DVF lays it all out with honesty. She discusses love, loss, motherhood, and ambition without apology. Her central message is empowerment through authenticity. ‘The Woman I Wanted to Be’ isn’t just about style—it’s about substance, resilience, and the lifelong process of stepping into one’s power with grace and grit. Through candid stories and heartfelt reflections, it encourages embracing vulnerability while cultivating confidence and authenticity in every aspect of life.
Karlie Kloss’s library reveals more than taste—it reflects a philosophy. Her book picks combine big ideas with personal courage, inviting readers to lead thoughtful lives. From ancient histories to urgent futures, from private reinventions to public activism, her selections suggest that learning never stops. Each book challenges conventional thinking and celebrates human possibility. Whether you’re building a business, finding your voice, or expanding your worldview, Kloss’s recommendations offer blueprints for living with purpose, curiosity, and bold, unwavering intention. They speak to dreamers, doers, and sceptics alike, encouraging reflection, resilience, and an unflinching commitment to growth and personal truth.
Ethics & Policy
AI and ethics – what is originality? Maybe we’re just not that special when it comes to creativity?
I don’t trust AI, but I use it all the time.
Let’s face it, that’s a sentiment that many of us can buy into if we’re honest about it. It comes from Paul Mallaghan, Head of Creative Strategy at We Are Tilt, a creative transformation content and campaign agency whose clients include the likes of Diageo, KPMG and Barclays.
Taking part in a panel debate on AI ethics at the recent Evolve conference in Brighton, UK, he made another highly pertinent point when he said of people in general:
We know that we are quite susceptible to confident bullshitters. Basically, that is what Chat GPT [is] right now. There’s something reminds me of the illusory truth effect, where if you hear something a few times, or you say it here it said confidently, then you are much more likely to believe it, regardless of the source. I might refer to a certain President who uses that technique fairly regularly, but I think we’re so susceptible to that that we are quite vulnerable.
And, yes, it’s you he’s talking about:
I mean all of us, no matter how intelligent we think we are or how smart over the machines we think we are. When I think about trust, – and I’m coming at this very much from the perspective of someone who runs a creative agency – we’re not involved in building a Large Language Model (LLM); we’re involved in using it, understanding it, and thinking about what the implications if we get this wrong. What does it mean to be creative in the world of LLMs?
Genuine
Being genuine, is vital, he argues, and being human – where does Human Intelligence come into the picture, particularly in relation to creativity. His argument:
There’s a certain parasitic quality to what’s being created. We make films, we’re designers, we’re creators, we’re all those sort of things in the company that I run. We have had to just face the fact that we’re using tools that have hoovered up the work of others and then regenerate it and spit it out. There is an ethical dilemma that we face every day when we use those tools.
His firm has come to the conclusion that it has to be responsible for imposing its own guidelines here to some degree, because there’s not a lot happening elsewhere:
To some extent, we are always ahead of regulation, because the nature of being creative is that you’re always going to be experimenting and trying things, and you want to see what the next big thing is. It’s actually very exciting. So that’s all cool, but we’ve realized that if we want to try and do this ethically, we have to establish some of our own ground rules, even if they’re really basic. Like, let’s try and not prompt with the name of an illustrator that we know, because that’s stealing their intellectual property, or the labor of their creative brains.
I’m not a regulatory expert by any means, but I can say that a lot of the clients we work with, to be fair to them, are also trying to get ahead of where I think we are probably at government level, and they’re creating their own frameworks, their own trust frameworks, to try and address some of these things. Everyone is starting to ask questions, and you don’t want to be the person that’s accidentally created a system where everything is then suable because of what you’ve made or what you’ve generated.
Originality
That’s not necessarily an easy ask, of course. What, for example, do we mean by originality? Mallaghan suggests:
Anyone who’s ever tried to create anything knows you’re trying to break patterns. You’re trying to find or re-mix or mash up something that hasn’t happened before. To some extent, that is a good thing that really we’re talking about pattern matching tools. So generally speaking, it’s used in every part of the creative process now. Most agencies, certainly the big ones, certainly anyone that’s working on a lot of marketing stuff, they’re using it to try and drive efficiencies and get incredible margins. They’re going to be on the race to the bottom.
But originality is hard to quantify. I think that actually it doesn’t happen as much as people think anyway, that originality. When you look at ChatGPT or any of these tools, there’s a lot of interesting new tools that are out there that purport to help you in the quest to come up with ideas, and they can be useful. Quite often, we’ll use them to sift out the crappy ideas, because if ChatGPT or an AI tool can come up with it, it’s probably something that’s happened before, something you probably don’t want to use.
More Human Intelligence is needed, it seems:
What I think any creative needs to understand now is you’re going to have to be extremely interesting, and you’re going to have to push even more humanity into what you do, or you’re going to be easily replaced by these tools that probably shouldn’t be doing all the fun stuff that we want to do. [In terms of ethical questions] there’s a bunch, including the copyright thing, but there’s partly just [questions] around purpose and fun. Like, why do we even do this stuff? Why do we do it? There’s a whole industry that exists for people with wonderful brains, and there’s lots of different types of industries [where you] see different types of brains. But why are we trying to do away with something that allows people to get up in the morning and have a reason to live? That is a big question.
My second ethical thing is, what do we do with the next generation who don’t learn craft and quality, and they don’t go through the same hurdles? They may find ways to use {AI] in ways that we can’t imagine, because that’s what young people do, and I have faith in that. But I also think, how are you going to learn the language that helps you interface with, say, a video model, and know what a camera does, and how to ask for the right things, how to tell a story, and what’s right? All that is an ethical issue, like we might be taking that away from an entire generation.
And there’s one last ‘tough love’ question to be posed:
What if we’re not special? Basically, what if all the patterns that are part of us aren’t that special? The only reason I bring that up is that I think that in every career, you associate your identity with what you do. Maybe we shouldn’t, maybe that’s a bad thing, but I know that creatives really associate with what they do. Their identity is tied up in what it is that they actually do, whether they’re an illustrator or whatever. It is a proper existential crisis to look at it and go, ‘Oh, the thing that I thought was special can be regurgitated pretty easily’…It’s a terrifying thing to stare into the Gorgon and look back at it and think,’Where are we going with this?’. By the way, I do think we’re special, but maybe we’re not as special as we think we are. A lot of these patterns can be matched.
My take
This was a candid worldview that raised a number of tough questions – and questions are often so much more interesting than answers, aren’t they? The subject of creativity and copyright has been handled at length on diginomica by Chris Middleton and I think Mallaghan’s comments pretty much chime with most of that.
I was particularly taken by the point about the impact on the younger generation of having at their fingertips AI tools that can ‘do everything, until they can’t’. I recall being horrified a good few years ago when doing a shift in a newsroom of a major tech title and noticing that the flow of copy had suddenly dried up. ‘Where are the stories?’, I shouted. Back came the reply, ‘Oh, the Internet’s gone down’. ‘Then pick up the phone and call people, find some stories,’ I snapped. A sad, baffled young face looked back at me and asked, ‘Who should we call?’. Now apart from suddenly feeling about 103, I was shaken by the fact that as soon as the umbilical cord of the Internet was cut, everyone was rendered helpless.
Take that idea and multiply it a billion-fold when it comes to AI dependency and the future looks scary. Human Intelligence matters
Ethics & Policy
Preparing Timor Leste to embrace Artificial Intelligence
UNESCO, in collaboration with the Ministry of Transport and Communications, Catalpa International and national lead consultant, jointly conducted consultative and validation workshops as part of the AI Readiness assessment implementation in Timor-Leste. Held on 8–9 April and 27 May respectively, the workshops convened representatives from government ministries, academia, international organisations and development partners, the Timor-Leste National Commission for UNESCO, civil society, and the private sector for a multi-stakeholder consultation to unpack the current stage of AI adoption and development in the country, guided by UNESCO’s AI Readiness Assessment Methodology (RAM).
In response to growing concerns about the rapid rise of AI, the UNESCO Recommendation on the Ethics of Artificial Intelligence was adopted by 194 Member States in 2021, including Timor-Leste, to ensure ethical governance of AI. To support Member States in implementing this Recommendation, the RAM was developed by UNESCO’s AI experts without borders. It includes a range of quantitative and qualitative questions designed to gather information across different dimensions of a country’s AI ecosystem, including legal and regulatory, social and cultural, economic, scientific and educational, technological and infrastructural aspects.
By compiling comprehensive insights into these areas, the final RAM report helps identify institutional and regulatory gaps, which can assist the government with the necessary AI governance and enable UNESCO to provide tailored support that promotes an ethical AI ecosystem aligned with the Recommendation.
The first day of the workshop was opened by Timor-Leste’s Minister of Transport and Communication, H.E. Miguel Marques Gonçalves Manetelu. In his opening remarks, Minister Manetelu highlighted the pivotal role of AI in shaping the future. He emphasised that the current global trajectory is not only driving the digitalisation of work but also enabling more effective and productive outcomes.
Ethics & Policy
Experts gather to discuss ethics, AI and the future of publishing
Publishing stands at a pivotal juncture, said Jeremy North, president of Global Book Business at Taylor & Francis Group, addressing delegates at the 3rd International Conference on Publishing Education in Beijing. Digital intelligence is fundamentally transforming the sector — and this revolution will inevitably create “AI winners and losers”.
True winners, he argued, will be those who embrace AI not as a replacement for human insight but as a tool that strengthens publishing’s core mission: connecting people through knowledge. The key is balance, North said, using AI to enhance creativity without diminishing human judgment or critical thinking.
This vision set the tone for the event where the Association for International Publishing Education was officially launched — the world’s first global alliance dedicated to advancing publishing education through international collaboration.
Unveiled at the conference cohosted by the Beijing Institute of Graphic Communication and the Publishers Association of China, the AIPE brings together nearly 50 member organizations with a mission to foster joint research, training, and innovation in publishing education.
Tian Zhongli, president of BIGC, stressed the need to anchor publishing education in ethics and humanistic values and reaffirmed BIGC’s commitment to building a global talent platform through AIPE.
BIGC will deepen academic-industry collaboration through AIPE to provide a premium platform for nurturing high-level, holistic, and internationally competent publishing talent, he added.
Zhang Xin, secretary of the CPC Committee at BIGC, emphasized that AIPE is expected to help globalize Chinese publishing scholarships, contribute new ideas to the industry, and cultivate a new generation of publishing professionals for the digital era.
Themed “Mutual Learning and Cooperation: New Ecology of International Publishing Education in the Digital Intelligence Era”, the conference also tackled a wide range of challenges and opportunities brought on by AI — from ethical concerns and content ownership to protecting human creativity and rethinking publishing values in higher education.
Wu Shulin, president of the Publishers Association of China, cautioned that while AI brings major opportunities, “we must not overlook the ethical and security problems it introduces”.
Catriona Stevenson, deputy CEO of the UK Publishers Association, echoed this sentiment. She highlighted how British publishers are adopting AI to amplify human creativity and productivity, while calling for global cooperation to protect intellectual property and combat AI tool infringement.
The conference aims to explore innovative pathways for the publishing industry and education reform, discuss emerging technological trends, advance higher education philosophies and talent development models, promote global academic exchange and collaboration, and empower knowledge production and dissemination through publishing education in the digital intelligence era.
yangyangs@chinadaily.com.cn
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