COGNITIVE SLAVES
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Posted: 23 Sep 2010 01:42 PM PDT

The companies that have created the most new value in the last decade, are
Internet companies like Facebook, Google, etc.  They've created hundreds of
billions in market value, driving by billions in financial profits.  Good
for them, but bad for us.

Why?  IF these companies represent the most valuable new industry of the
early 21st Century, where are the jobs that will provide prosperity for
millions today, and potentially tens of millions in the future?  They don't
exist.  These companies create few real jobs.

The distressing part is that in reality these companies actually employ
hundreds of millions of people, particularly young and otherwise un or
underemployed superusers.  People that work for them day in and day out for
free: finding, sifting, sorting, connecting, building, etc.

Let's take Facebook as an example.  Currently it's valued at ~$25 billion by
the market.   However, it could be argued that ~100,000 superusers out of
500 million part time users, are the reason that Facebook is valuable.  They
generate the core network that is the backbone of the tool.  Their devoted
use, high levels of connectivity, and loyalty forms the engine that grows
Facebook, year in and year out.  They are the materials, labor, and product
of Facebook's assembly line.  Yet they aren't paid for their effort.  They
aren't generating wealth for themselves or their families.  

How much wealth?  If we awarded 4/5 ths of the value of Facebook (and the
same exercise could be done with Google at a couple of million superusers)
to its superusers, leaving the tool managers $5 billion in value,each
superuser would now be worth $200,000 from their contributions to this tool
alone.  But they aren't.  They haven't earned a penny for their effort. 

One way to look at this is that we are truly in trouble.  If the industries
of the future are based on cognitive slavery, we all lose.  However, as an
entrepreneur, an optimist (believe it or not), and a believer in the
potential for social/economic improvement, I think this can be corrected.  I
believe it's possible to build tools and the companies that manage them, in
a way that actually rewards the people that do most of the work.  All we
need to do is make it possible.

 







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