Emma Goldberg is a features writer for the New York Times. She writes about cultural and economic change. She has recently written about an atheist on death row, a grieving son who became an Israeli peace activist, and how the pandemic changed our relationship with time. Her book, Life on the Line: Young Doctors Come of Age in a Pandemic, was published by HarperCollins in June 2021. The Washington Post called it “essential reading.” Her work has received the Newswomen’s Club of New York Best Feature Award, the Religion News Association’s Award for Excellence in Feature Writing, the New York Press Club’s Nellie Bly Award, and the Sidney Hillman Foundation’s Sidney Award. She has also been a finalist for the Livingston Award and a Deadline Award. She received her BA at Yale and MPhil at Cambridge University.
Zvika Krieger was the first-ever Director of Responsible Innovation at Meta/Facebook, where he worked with product teams across Facebook, Messenger, Instagram, Whatsapp, Reality Labs, and more to help surface and address potential product harms.
He now works with industry-leading companies to develop Responsible Innovation strategies to effectively anticipate and mitigate potential harms in their products. His current and recent clients include TikTok, Google, Airbnb, and Pixar.
He previously served on the Executive Committee of the World Economic Forum, where he launched Centers for the Fourth Industrial Revolution in 13 countries, working with governments, companies, and stakeholders from around the world to accelerate the adoption of new technologies in the global public interest. He has taught courses on design, technology, and social impact at Stanford, UC Berkeley, and the Rhode Island School of Design.
Zvika is the Spiritual Leader of Chochmat HaLev, a progressive spiritual community in Berkeley, California for embodied prayer, heart-centered connections, and mystical experiences.