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Elaine Moore

Tech Comment Editor

Elaine Moore is Tech comment editor at the Financial Times. Previously, she was deputy editor of the FT’s Lex column and wrote commentary on the technology industry from the San Francisco bureau. Prior to this she covered global government debt from London, with a particular focus on the debt crisis in Greece, Ukraine and Venezuela.
Email Elaine Moore @ElaineDMoore  on X.com (link opens in a new browser window)
  • Thursday, 23 October, 2025
    Technology
    Where does Wikipedia go in the age of AI?

    Crowdsourced, open edited and free, the site must seize the new technology as an opportunity

    Illustration of a robot pulling up a chair to join three people sitting at a table adding pieces to a puzzle of the globe
  • Thursday, 18 September, 2025
    Big Data
    Is $50 a fair price for your data?

    Personal information is spilling out of us constantly — but some of it is worth more than the rest

    A finger hovers over a touchscreen displaying a cookie consent pop-up with the ‘Accept All’ option highlighted
  • Thursday, 28 August, 2025
    Artificial intelligence
    The perils of vibe coding

    AI companies want to prove productivity gains — but there’s a risk we may create software with inbuilt problems

    A row of rubber ducks. Some developers say AI is best used as a way to talk through coding problems, a technique they call rubber ducking (after their habit of talking to the toys on their desk)
  • Thursday, 7 August, 2025
    FT MagazineLife & Arts
    What unrestricted internet access did to Gen Z’s love life

    A cautionary tale

    Illustration of a person sitting cross-legged inside a glass dome, looking down at a phone
  • Thursday, 24 July, 2025
    Technology
    The book that explains the billionaire doomers

    A niche investment text from the 1990s reveals why powerful tech leaders fixate on the apocalypse

    Ann Kiernan illustration of an apocalyptic scene with a man holding his jacket looking across a dystopian landscape.
  • Friday, 13 June, 2025
    Technology sector
    Here come the glassholes, part II

    Adding facial recognition to smart glasses may not prove as popular as some in Silicon Valley believe

    Illustration of eyes looking through eye-testing equipment against a background of street map
  • Wednesday, 4 June, 2025
    OutlookUS society
    A new psychedelic era dawns in America

    Magic mushrooms remain illegal in California but you wouldn’t know that from the gatherings in San Francisco

    Magic mushrooms displayed in a colourful, computer-enhanced composite image
  • Thursday, 15 May, 2025
    Artificial intelligence
    How one teenager uses AI

    Adolescent practice with new technologies can provide a form of divination for adults

    María Hergueta illustration of a teenage girl lying on her bed talking on a mobile phone.
  • Thursday, 24 April, 2025
    Business InsightSpace industry
    Billionaires want to go to space — the rest of us aren’t so sure

    The private tech race is at odds with public appetite for extravagant suborbital trips

    Katy Perry exits the Blue Origin capsule
  • Sunday, 13 April, 2025
    Digital economy
    Storage units are the new hemline index

    Digital goods will never match the attachment felt for things in the real world

    A person in a cardboard box slides down a red graph line
  • Thursday, 13 March, 2025
    Business InsightTech start-ups
    Who needs revenue when you’re a multibillion-dollar AI start-up?

    Companies with no products or idea yet on how to make money are seeking huge valuations in funding deals

  • Monday, 17 February, 2025
    Artificial intelligence
    Grok, o3 and ELMo — there’s a reason AI names are so weird

    Incoherent nomenclature is a tradition in the tech sector, where titles are often designed to amuse teams, not users

    Grok, Deepseek, Gemini and ChatGPT logos
  • Thursday, 23 January, 2025
    Donald Trump
    Eagles, flags and a thumbs-up: what Trump’s White House website tells us

    His revamped online presence portrays the president as part action hero, part hard-nosed CEO

    María Hergueta illustration of Donald Trump riding the American eagle, while pointing ahead
  • Wednesday, 1 January, 2025
    Media
    One hundred million fans cannot make you famous

    Mass, cross-generational audiences have disappeared and even MrBeast can’t find them

    A glittery, fizzing star dissolves in a glass of water, and a blister pack of other star capsules sits beside the glass
  • Thursday, 26 December, 2024
    ReviewNon-Fiction
    Emily Nussbaum’s Cue the Sun! — reality TV bites

    An exploration of the history and legacy of this manipulative genre manages to navigate the silly and the serious

    A man with a red suitcase walks through the street
  • Tuesday, 24 December, 2024
    Artificial intelligence
    Year in a word: Slop

    AI could build a better future — but not without proliferating spam-like, low-grade content first

    Montage image of the word ‘slop’ and an animated person whose face is green and pixelated
  • Wednesday, 4 December, 2024
    Employment
    Blame AI for your gruelling job interview

    Efforts to push back against unsuitable mass applications are turning a dispiriting situation into a miserable one

    Andy Carter illustration of an applicant sat in front of rows of interviewers set up one behind the other
  • Thursday, 21 November, 2024
    FT CollectionsAI Exchange
    Otter.ai’s Sam Liang: We can unlock valuable data from meetings and conversations

    Co-founder of transcription start-up reckons we can even let avatars take our place in work interactions

  • Saturday, 2 November, 2024
    Gaming
    Man vs machinima: can video games ever be art?

    The uncanny semi-reality of computer-generated worlds is producing a new form of filmmaking

    A still from Grand Theft Hamlet
  • Tuesday, 15 October, 2024
    Social affairs
    The sperm donor bros of tech

    Genetic largesse from some of Silicon Valley’s elite appears to be a mix of narcissism, altruism and dreams of immortality

    Ewan White illustration of many Lego figures lined up wearing white clothes on a blue background
  • Wednesday, 9 October, 2024
    Technology sector
    Google break-up could turn Big Tech into Medium Tech

    The DoJ’s recommendations show how far the government is willing to go to shift the balance of power

    A view of the outside of Google’s headquarters
  • Friday, 13 September, 2024
    ReviewNon-Fiction
    Meditations for Mortals by Oliver Burkeman — time to embrace our imperfections?

    In his follow-up to the bestselling ‘Four Thousand Weeks’, the writer aims to unshackle us from the never-ending dream of life improvement

    A man in a black T-shirt writes on a board on a wall
  • Tuesday, 27 August, 2024
    Artificial intelligence
    Using fear to sell AI is a bad idea

    Constant warnings about the technology’s power primes early users for disappointment

    AI generated cityscape
  • Tuesday, 13 August, 2024
    Technology sector
    Digital meatballs and the rise of branded games

    A virtual Ikea store without any products might seem like good advertising — but is it fun for the consumer?

    A hand holds up a plate of pixelated food
  • Tuesday, 2 July, 2024
    Technology sector
    Forget radical honesty — Big Tech revisits its corporate culture

    As the sector ages, markers of traditional hierarchy are creeping in

    Google software engineer Amanda Camp demonstrates using the climbing wall during the grand opening of Google Kirkland October 28, 2009
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