Glen writes:
 
"This reminded me of my (postmodern) criticism of open source (in spite of any 
of my advocacy of it), that open source *can* be exploited by an elite set of 
people who are elite by their capability to know how to read, use, and think 
about code, or design google queries, or SEO. It's only "democratization" IF 
the skills and resources to use it are available to everyone."

How about bicycle racing.   Not everyone can achieve > 80 ml/kg/min VO2 max, 
but a few people can.    These are biologically gifted people, and then they 
train like hell too, and/or sometimes use performance enhancing drugs.   There 
are some people that can train like hell but always be beaten by someone than 
trains as hard or less.  They just don't have it.   

Open source as a meritocracy is attractive to its adherents because it selects 
for individuals that succeed in developing a particular kind of sustained 
intellectual productivity, based on nothing else but the fact that they do.    
You can't just go through a particular training procedure and come out a 
productive peer in this community.  It doesn't matter if you are born a citizen 
of a hypothetical Code Nation.    People from all over the world end-up being 
recruited to major tech firms who can see the value of their work, and not just 
the bullet points on a resume.

It seems silly to say that one would democratize elite bicycle racing.   

Marcus

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