Der 80-minütige Dokumentarfilm von Silvia Holzinger und Peter Haas porträtiert den deutsch-amerikanischen Informatikpionier und Gesellschaftskritiker Joseph Weizenbaum. In Berlin geboren, verließ Joseph Weizenbaum Deutschland 1936 und kehrte nach über 60 Jahren dorthin zurück. Der Film ist zugleich die erzählte, persönliche Lebensreise des heute 84-jährigen „Rebellen“ und die Geschichte einer Jahrhunderterfindung, die des Computers.
The Jewish Weizenbaum family left Germany and their family furrier business in 1936, and started all over in Detroit, Michigan, when Joseph was 13. At a time when the German capital, Berlin, was struggling with famine after World War II, Joseph Weizenbaum was soldering and programming the world's first computers. He created the first banking computer in the world, was perhaps one of the first computer nerds ever and pursued an unprecedented career at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, the "mighty" MIT in Cambridge, where he invented the first virtual persona, ELIZA/DOCTOR, a program that engaged humans in conversation with a computer. Later, Weizenbaum was branded as a heretic when he began to criticize his colleagues in public. After retiring as a full professor at MIT, he left the United States and is now living in Berlin-Mitte again. Weizenbaum eventually became a "preacher", strictly demanding responsibility of each individual scientist, condemning war and arguing that ...
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