Jaron Lanier

Who Owns the Future?

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  • Patricia Ortegahas quoted6 years ago
    In the network age there can be collusion without colluders, conspiracies without conspirators
  • Patricia Ortegahas quoted6 years ago
    Siren Servers do repattern the world, however, and conventional business thinking is inadequate to describe how they work
  • Patricia Ortegahas quoted6 years ago
    It ideally doesn’t do or make anything. The plan is simply to channel the information of those who do act in the world.
  • Patricia Ortegahas quoted6 years ago
    When copying is easy, there is almost no intrinsic scarcity, and therefore market value collapses.
  • Patricia Ortegahas quoted6 years ago
    The legitimizing of the levees of the middle classes reinforced the legitimacy of the levees of the rich. A symmetrical social contract between nonequals made modernity possible.
  • Patricia Ortegahas quoted6 years ago
    The recent breakdowns of finance can be understood as the symptoms of a fallacious hope that information technology can make promises on its own, without people
  • Patricia Ortegahas quoted6 years ago
    Artificial memory became more person-centric out of necessity
  • Patricia Ortegahas quoted6 years ago
    Ordinary people can help create new money by making promises. You constrain the future by making a plan, and a promise to keep to it. Money is created in response, because in making that promise you have created value. New money is created to represent that value
  • Patricia Ortegahas quoted6 years ago
    Not all new wealth is created from game-changing events like inventions or natural resource discoveries.† Some of it comes from the ability of ordinary people to keep promises
  • Patricia Ortegahas quoted6 years ago
    Any information technology, from the most ancient money to the latest cloud computing, is based fundamentally on design judgments about what to remember and what to forget
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